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Not for the faint of heart: Closures & Layoffs (Feb. 1-7)

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-07-09 07:36 PM
Original message
Not for the faint of heart: Closures & Layoffs (Feb. 1-7)
:scared: :beer:



from costar.com:



Closures & Layoffs (Feb. 1-7): 2008's Brutal Layoff Count
A Weekly Report on Future Corporate Downsizings

By Mark Heschmeyer
February 4, 2009




Plus, a whole new round of major U.S. corporation closures and layoffs were announced in California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and Washington.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Sacked: 2008's Brutal Tally

From the start of the recession in December 2007 through December 2008, employers initiated 23,485 mass layoffs. Each involved at least 50 people. The actions impacted 2.39 million workers. The numbers are the highest annual levels since 2001 and 2002, respectively.

Manufacturing accounted for 33% of all mass layoff events and 41% of initial claims filed during 2008, up slightly from 2007 (30% and 38%, respectively). The number of manufacturing claimants was highest in transportation equipment manufacturing, 323,676, followed by food manufacturing, 72,081, and wood product manufacturing, 56,374.

Among the major industry sectors, manufacturing had the largest over-the-year increase in mass layoff-related initial claims (+260,213) from 2007 to 2008. Within manufacturing, transportation equipment (+95,463), plastics and rubber products (+24,638), and fabricated metal products (+23,083) experienced the largest increases from the previous year. Administrative and waste services had the second largest increase (+78,183) among the major industry sectors, due to more layoff activity in administrative and support services (+77,864).

Among the 50 states and the District of Columbia, California recorded the largest number of initial claims (446,480) filed in mass layoff events during 2008, accounting for 21% of the national total.

The states with the next highest numbers of initial claims were Michigan (132,468), Ohio (131,813), Pennsylvania (128,041), and Illinois (103,685).

Eleven states--Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Montana, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Tennessee, Vermont, and Wyoming--recorded series highs in mass layoff claimant activity in 2008, while two states--Maine and Virginia--reported series lows.

The national unemployment rate was 7.2% in December, seasonally adjusted, up from 6.8% the prior month and from 4.9% a year earlier.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Macy's Cuts Workforce by 3.9%; Reduces Capital Expenditures; Reorganizes

By: Sasha M Pardy
Macy's Inc. announced a series of cost reduction initiatives that the company expects will result in a $400 million annual reduction in planned expenses for 2010 and $250 million for 2009. Included in the plan is a company-wide consolidation of divisions and corporate office functions and investments in local infrastructure resulting in a net reduction of 7,000 positions or 4% of its total workforce;

In addition, Macy's is shifting management of stores into a "My Macy's" format that will group all stores into 69 geographic districts including 10-12 stores each. This new structure will become effective in the second quarter and will include approximately 1,200 new positions managing the My Macy's districts and regions. The company said a new executive management team would be put in place as well.

Macy's further reduced its 2009 capital expenditure plan to $450 million, down from a previously announced $550-$600 million. The company said no additional store closing announcements, aside from the 11 announced last month, would be made at this time.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Starbucks Closing 300 More Stores; Cutting 6,700 Jobs

By: Sasha M Pardy
Seattle-based coffee roaster Starbucks Corp. plans to close 200 additional underperforming company-operated stores. This is in addition to the 600 store closings the company announced in July 2008.

Internationally, Starbucks is closing 100 stores, plus the 61 store closures in Australia it announced during the summer. Nearly all these stores will be closed by the end of Starbucks' fiscal year in September 2009.

The coffee retailer is also pulling further back on new store openings. During fiscal 2009, it plans to open 140 new U.S. stores (down from its previous target of 200 stores) and 170 international stores (down from its previous expectation of 270 stores). Additionally, Starbucks has lowered its net new licensed store target (typically grocery store, school, and airport locations) to 125 in the U.S. and 360 internationally. In comparison, Starbucks opened 445 net new company-operated stores and 438 licensed stores in the U.S. during fiscal 2008, as well as 786 net new international locations.

Through these closures, as well as other "labor efficiency" initiatives, Starbucks said as many as 6,000 store positions and 700 non-store positions (including 350 at its Seattle headquarters) would be eliminated in 2009.

Starbucks' first quarter results included a 10% decline in U.S. comparable store sales and a 6% decline in U.S. net revenues.



Closures & Layoffs

California

3M Co., 1331 Commerce Street, Petaluma is closing down and laying off 105 workers on Feb. 1.

A Firstgroup America, dba-First Transit, 5357 Valley Blvd, Los Angeles is laying off 177 workers on Feb. 28.

Adobe Systems Inc., 601 Townsend Street, San Francisco is laying off 75 workers on Feb. 3.

Adobe Systems Inc., 345 Park Avenue, San Jose is laying off 191 workers on Feb. 3.

Alza Corp., 1010 Joaquin Road, Mountain View is closing down and laying off 29 workers on March 20.

AT&T Co., 4430 Rosewood Drive, Pleasanton is laying off 27 workers on Feb. 6.

AT&T, National Customer Support, 2623 Camino Ramon, San Ramon is laying off 16 workers on Feb. 6.

Calsonic Kansei, 9 Holland, Irvine is closing down and laying off 28 workers on August 28.

Cartus, 27271 Las Ramblas, Mission Viejo is closing down and laying off 120 workers on Feb. 6. ..............(much more, sadly)

The complete list is at: http://www.costar.com/news/Article.aspx?id=CDB398A1174FFB05274DB480586B1333





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MrPerson Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-07-09 07:44 PM
Response to Original message
1. Holy Crap
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Xipe Totec Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-07-09 07:46 PM
Response to Original message
2. This proves we need more tax cuts for the rich
This post has been :sarcasm: captioned for the humor impaired... :evilgrin:


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susu369 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-07-09 08:18 PM
Response to Original message
3. Sign of the times for newspapers?
Amid another round of belt-tightening, the Ledger-Enquirer and Macon Telegraph newspapers said Thursday that production work will be shifting from Macon, Ga., to Columbus in April. The Ledger-Enquirer will print the Macon newspaper seven days a week.

The move will mean the layoff of 58 employees at the Telegraph, nearly 30 percent of the company’s work force, Telegraph Publisher George McCanless said in a Telegraph story Thursday.

At the same time, Ledger-Enquirer Publisher Valerie Canepa said the newspaper is preparing to make additional job and expense cuts because of a deteriorating financial outlook.

=snip=

“We don’t have a readership problem,” Canepa said. “We have a revenue problem.”

McCanless said the decision to move printing of the Telegraph to its sister paper in Columbus will amount to savings of more than $1 million annually.

=snip=

Canepa declined to say how much Sacramento, Calif.-based The McClatchy Co. has mandated the Ledger-Enquirer eliminate from its budget. More details will be available within two weeks, she said.

=snip=

The announcements in Columbus and Macon came the same day Gary Pruitt, McClatchy’s chairman, president and chief executive officer, said the company is freezing employee pensions and temporarily halting matching contributions to workers’ 401(k) savings plans. The retirement plan moves take effect March 31.

McClatchy owns the Ledger-Enquirer and Telegraph, as well as larger newspapers such as The Miami Herald, THe Kansas City Star and The Sacramento Bee.

Full story:
http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/102/story/607929.html
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Mari333 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-07-09 08:20 PM
Response to Original message
4. as long as corporations keep outsourcing, this will continue..
no one is being held accountable.

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Fleshdancer Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Feb-07-09 08:22 PM
Response to Original message
5. OMG! The ENTIRE CA list is insane:
California

3M Co., 1331 Commerce Street, Petaluma is closing down and laying off 105 workers on Feb. 1.

A Firstgroup America, dba-First Transit, 5357 Valley Blvd, Los Angeles is laying off 177 workers on Feb. 28.

Adobe Systems Inc., 601 Townsend Street, San Francisco is laying off 75 workers on Feb. 3.

Adobe Systems Inc., 345 Park Avenue, San Jose is laying off 191 workers on Feb. 3.

Alza Corp., 1010 Joaquin Road, Mountain View is closing down and laying off 29 workers on March 20.

AT&T Co., 4430 Rosewood Drive, Pleasanton is laying off 27 workers on Feb. 6.

AT&T, National Customer Support, 2623 Camino Ramon, San Ramon is laying off 16 workers on Feb. 6.

Calsonic Kansei, 9 Holland, Irvine is closing down and laying off 28 workers on August 28.

Cartus, 27271 Las Ramblas, Mission Viejo is closing down and laying off 120 workers on Feb. 6.

Cnet Networks Inc., 235 Second Street, San Francisco is laying off 85 workers on Feb. 9.

Decurion Management Co., 120 North Roberson Boulevard Los Angeles, 90048 is laying off 80 workers on Feb. 6.

Deutsch, 700 Hathaway Drive, Banning is laying off 78 workers on Feb. 21.

Deutsch Industrial, Products Division, 5733 W Whittier Ave., Hemet is laying off 41 workers on Feb. 21.

Dole Fresh Vegetables Inc., 500 South Alta Street, Gonzales is closing down and laying off 186 workers on March 1.

Domino Lasers Inc., 1904 Wright Circle, Anaheim is closing down and laying off 60 workers on Feb. 7.

Fluidmaster Inc., 30800 Rancho Viejo Road, San Juan Capistrano is closing down and laying off 27 workers on Feb. 18.

Gemological Institute America 5345 Armada Drive, Carlsbad is laying off 110 workers on Feb. 10.

Global Pharmaceutical Supply Group (GPSG), 700 Eubanks Drive, Vacaville is laying off 22 workers on Feb. 20.

Gregg Industries Inc., 10460 Hickson Street, El Monte is laying off 81 workers on Feb. 11.

Hannibal Industries Inc., 3851 South Santa Avenue, 90058 is laying off 35 workers on Feb. 16.

JPMorgan Chase Bank, 4900,4920,4940,5020 & 5040 Johnson Drive Pleasanton, 94588 is laying off 654 workers on March 31.

JPMorgan Chase Bank, 17861, 17875, 17877 Von Karman Ave. & 17872 Gillette Ave., Irvine is laying off 34 workers on March 31.

JPMorgan Chase Bank, 123 & 201 Mission Street, San Francisco is laying off 120 workers on March 31.

JPMorgan Chase Bank, 17872 Gillette Avenue & 17875 Von Karman Avenue, Irvine is laying off 29 workers on May 1.

JPMorgan Chase Bank, 400, Main Street, 95202 is laying off 44 workers on May 31.

Kaplan Professional Schools, 25341 Commercentre Drive, Lake Forest, 92630 is laying off 55 workers on Feb. 2.

Life Technologies, 850 Lincoln Center Drive, Foster City is laying off 40 workers on July 30.

Marriott Ownership Resorts Inc., 3130 S Harbor Blvd #150, Santa Ana is laying off 110 workers on Feb. 20.

Marriott Ownership Resorts Inc., 3130 S Harbor Blvd #150, Santa Ana is closing down and laying off 29 workers on March 6.

Marvell Semiconductor Inc., 5488 Marvell Lane, Santa Clara is laying off 46 workers on Feb. 13.

Naked Juice Plant, 435 West 8th Street, Azusa is closing down and laying off 33 workers on Feb. 13.

Pentair Electronic Packaging, 14100 Danielson Street, Poway is laying off 158 workers on Feb. 12.

Philips Lighting, 2930 S Fairview Street, Santa Ana is closing down and laying off 70 workers on Feb. 27.

Philips Lighting, 6603 Darin Way, Cypress is closing down and laying off 47 workers on March 27.

PVH Superbra/Insignia Neckwear Inc. 1735 S Santa, Ave., Los Angeles is laying off 148 workers on Feb. 15.

Ralphs Grocery Co., 3859 24th Street, San Francisco is laying off 67 workers on Feb. 14.

Ralphs Grocery Co., 3950 24th Street, San Francisco is closing down and laying off 31 workers on Feb. 14.

Ralphs Grocery Co., 1095 Hyde Street, San Francisco is closing down and laying off 17 workers on Feb. 14.

Ralphs Grocery Co., 1390 Silver Avenue, San Francisco is closing down and laying off 13 workers on Feb. 14.

Reelzchannel, 1201 W 5th, #T900, Los Angeles is laying off 64 workers on Feb. 8.

Roadway Express - Burbank, 12200 Montague Street, Pacoima is closing down and laying off 55 workers on March 1.

San Francisco Housing Authority, 440 Turk Street, San Francisco is laying off 73 workers on Feb. 13.

Seagate Technology LLC, 155 & 195, Milpitas Blvd. & 311 Turquoise Drive, Milpitas is closing down and laying off 43 workers on April 3.

Sharp Cabrillo Skilled Nursing Center, 3475 Kenyon Street, San Diego is closing down and laying off 168 workers on April 3.

Shutterfly Inc., 3157 Corporate Place, Hayward is laying off 45 workers on April 2.

Silicon Storage Technology Inc., 1171 Sonora Court, Sunnyvale is laying off 60 workers on Feb. 15.

Solstice Capital Group Inc., 17461 Derian Ave., Suite 200, Irvine is laying off 135 workers on Feb. 9.

Starwood Vacation Ownership Inc., 190 Carousel Mall, San Bernardino is closing down and laying off 218 workers on January 19.

Stec Inc., 3001 Daimler St., Santa Ana is closing down and laying off 102 workers on March 6.

Sunesis Pharmaceuticals Inc. terminated its lease with ARE-Technology Center SSF LLC at 341 Oyster Point Blvd. in South San Francisco, CA, which formerly served as Sunesis' headquarters and research and development facility. Sunesis was required to pay Alexandria a base monthly rent and operating expenses of approximately $15.7 million between February 2009 and June 2013. To terminate the lease, it paid $2.21 million.

The Western Union Co., 100 North Point, San Francisco is laying off 22 workers on June 5.

TTX Co., 10800 San Sevaine Way, Mira Loma is closing down and laying off 209 workers on Feb. 28.

Unilever Foodsolutions, 1930 California Ave., Corona is closing down and laying off 104 workers on Feb. 8.

USS-Posco Industries, 900 Loveridge Road, Pittsburg is laying off 827 workers on December 11.

Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, One Enterprise, Aliso Viejo is laying off 23 workers on March 31.

Vishay Siliconix, 2201 Laurelwood Road, Santa Clara is laying off 97 workers on Feb. 6.

Western Digital Fremont LLC, 44100 Osgood Road, Fremont is laying off 65 workers on March 2.

Western Digital Technologies Inc., 5863 Rue Ferrari, San Jose is laying off 22 workers on Feb. 6.

Wyndham Vacation Ownership, 18301 Von Karman Avenue, Suite 100 Irvine is laying off 56 workers on Feb. 17.

Xyratex International Inc., 855 Riverside Parkway, West Sacramento is laying off 154 workers on Feb. 9.

Xyratex International Inc., 855 Riverside Pkwy, West Sacramento is laying off 157 workers on Feb. 16.

Yahoo! Inc., 2700 Pennsylvania Avenue, Santa Monica is laying off 77 workers on Feb. 13.

Yahoo! Inc., 701 First Avenue, Sunnyvale is laying off 295 workers on Feb. 13.

Yahoo! Inc., 2811 & 2821 Mission College Boulevard Santa Clara is laying off 173 workers on Feb. 13.

Yahoo! Inc., 3333 & 3355 Empire Avenue, Burbank is laying off 160 workers on Feb. 13.

Yellow Transportation - Santa Springs, 12250 Clark Street, Santa, Springs is closing down and laying off 83 workers on March 1.

YRC Inc., 4200 W Capitol Ave., West Sacramento is laying off 183 workers on March 1.
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