IP begins shutdowns
Published 5:15 pm Friday, January 1, 2010
The first of approximately 1,100 workers at International Paper Co.’s Franklin mill lost their jobs during the final hours of 2009, as the company shut down one of the three paper machines still running.
Communications Manager Desmond Stills said Tuesday that the company intended to stick with plans it announced in October to shut down the No. 1 paper machine — which makes uncoated freesheet, or copy, paper — by the end of the year.
IP sent a letter dated Oct. 30 to City of Franklin and Isle of Wight County officials in compliance with the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act.
Thursday was to have been the last day for166 hourly employees. Of those, 61 were paper mill employees, 51 were in operational services, 19 were in fibers general operations and 15 were in planning, shipping and distribution. An additional 13 workers were in the power and recovery department, six were in wood-yard operations and one was in the accounting department.
“The information we released (in October) is the same,” Still said on Tuesday.
All of the affected workers belong to one of three unions at the mill. IP said that of the 166 workers who were to be let go on Thursday, 76 were members of Local 1488 of the United Steelworkers of America, 62 were with Local 505 of the United Steelworkers of America, and 28 were members of Chapter 176 of the National Conference of Firemen & Oilers District of Local 32BJ/SEIU.
Stills said this week’s layoffs were to have been based “primarily” on seniority.
“They are based upon the contract between the unions and IP, which is primarily based on seniority.”
Stills added that despite the impending closure of the entire mill by spring, mill workers are looking to the future.
“Our employees are getting great opportunities to pursue other employment,” Stills said. “The state’s rapid response center stationed at the mill has been a great help and has been very well utilized by employees.”
IP announced Oct. 22 that it would close the Franklin mill as part of a strategy of reducing production capacity. The company shut down the No. 6 paper machine at the mill on Nov. 9 and said at the time that the 32 affected employees would remain employed in other capacities until Dec. 31.
According to the Oct. 30 WARN letter, IP will retain 770 hourly and 187 salaried employees until the mill closes in the spring.