We've lost most of our local low-skilled manufacturing jobs due to low demand, outsourcing, offshoring, automation, robotics, computerization and other productivity enhancing technology, but we may be adding some high tech jobs which also provide thousand of construction jobs, support jobs and indirect jobs.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]Last Piece In Place For Chip Plant
MALTA & STILLWATER — The last obstacle to the start of construction on the $4.2 billion computer chip factory at the Luther Forest Technology Campus has been cleared.
A project labor agreement has been reached between GlobalFoundries and the construction trade unions that sought work on the project, Gov. David Paterson announced Wednesday.
The factory will be one of the largest private investments ever made in the state, and Paterson and other state officials praised accomplishment of the labor deal.
In his announcement, Paterson said the agreement between M+W Zander and the Greater Capital Region Building and Construction Trades Council AFL-CIO will be signed this week.
It establishes that union-scale wages will be paid on 93 percent of the work but doesn’t require contractors to be unionized, said Prairie Wells, a spokeswoman for the council. The remaining 7 percent of work not covered will involve highly specialized high-tech work.
There are also provisions for the “Helmets to Hardhats” program to hire veterans for construction jobs, and local people get first crack at the jobs, Wells said.
The local building trade unions in return pledge not to strike or engage in other actions that would impede construction during the three- or four-year life of the project.
Unions had argued that there should be a project labor agreement because of the $1.2 billion in economic incentives GlobalFoundries is receiving to locate in New York state.
“Bringing economic development like this not only creates jobs and leverages private investment, but it positions New York as a technology giant,” Paterson said in a statement.
GlobalFoundries is expected to spend $800 million on construction of a 1.2 million-square-foot plant, creating 1,600 construction jobs and another 2,700 construction-related jobs, according to Paterson’s office.
The factory, which GlobalFoundries is calling Fab 2, will fabricate 22-nanometer chips, expected to be cutting-edge when it opens in 2012.
The plant is expected to have more than 1,400 permanent jobs with an average salary of $60,000 and create another 5,000 secondary jobs in the surrounding area.
http://www.dailygazette.com/news/2009/j ... _chipdeal/