Dell is off-shoring jobs being lost as Winston-Salem plant is shut down
Get the latest news alerts: Follow LTW at Twitter.
The Associated Press, LTW
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. - Production at the North Carolina plant that Dell Inc. (NASDAQ: Dell) is closing in Winston-Salem will be moved to Mexico and other countries, according to a federal document.
The High Point Enterprise reported Friday that Dell indicated in a Trade Adjustment Assistance Act petition that the work that has been done in Winston-Salem will be given to third-party providers in Mexico and other countries.
According to the newspaper, the petition states: "Our (Dell's) work volume is being transferred to a global manufacturing network.”
The work will be given to third-party providers who operate in Mexico and other countries around the globe."
Dell said last week it will close the plant, cutting almost one thousand jobs in North Carolina. The petition allows workers at the Winston-Salem plant to collect additional unemployment benefits.
The plant primarily manufacturers desktop PCs, the market for which has been badly hurt during the global recession.
In the latest worldwide PC sales statistics issued this week by analysis firms IDC and Gartner, Dell fell to third place in global market share from second. Acer is No. 2 behind No. 1 HP. Morrisville-based Lenovo is No. 4.
HP also surpassed Dell as the sales leader in the U.S.
About 600 Dell workers will be laid off in November, officials said. Affected employees will receive severance pay, incentive payments, benefits continuation and outplacement services, they said.
State lawmakers approved a $242 million package of tax breaks and other incentives in 2004 to lure the Texas-based computer maker to North Carolina, and Forsyth County and Winston-Salem kicked in another $37 million in incentives.
Many of the incentives were linked to employment and investment targets over time.
When Dell selected North Carolina for its new plant, the company promised to invest at least $100 million in its plant and create at least 1,500 jobs by 2020. Its 750,000-square-foot plant opened in late 2005 with great fanfare – company founder Michael Dell joined state and local officials at the dedication.
---
Note: Some information from: High Point Enterprise
Featured
Hot Off The Wire
- Hot Off the Wire – Maryland firm BroadSoft files for IPO; Twitter preps China page; John Grisham’s Firm, other titles now e-books
- Hot Off the Wire – Apple charges $107 for iPad batteries; Amazon drops Colorado affiliates like it did in N.C.; Facebook expands in India
- Hot Off the Wire – $5M bonus for Apple exec; Disney to shut studio, cut 450 jobs; Motorola co-CEO’s pay $3.77M; Adobe CEO pay plunges 68%
E-mail Preferences
The Skinny
- N.C. fund is good news for state's tech entrepreneurs
- Another 202 layoffs at IBM push latest count above 2,900
- ‘Social media is a beast’ – So how can your business tame it?
- In tough climate, GSK dedicates plant to fight elephantiasis
- ‘Who’s Cisco?’ New RTP site exec recalls a humble birth
- Google, N.C.? UNC-CH, Carrboro, Chapel Hill want Google Net
- Tweet this from Epic: Three more hints about Gears 3
- ‘The Daily Me’: You want your news mobile, instantly from several sources
- ‘Gears 3’ rumors grow louder – Epic president dropping hints
- Intel-ligent boost for tech – Intel, VCs launch investment alliance

