Thursday, October 15, 2009

The Sylvania Telephone: 150 to lose jobs as Sylvania Yarn Systems closes

Sylvania Yarn Systems Inc. announced Wednesday afternoon that it will close its carpet yarn manufacturing plant by the end of the year, putting 150 full-time employees out of work and ending a 40-year history in the county.
The company cited “the severe recession that the carpet industry has experienced for over a year, and the subsequent reduction in customer order volume at its plant.” The company “plans an orderly wind-down of operations by year-end,” it said in a news release.
SYS avoided a similar fate in 1995, when employees organized to buy the plant from BASF and keep it open. “We just weren’t able to pull the rabbit out of the hat again,” said Don Aaron, president of the company. He has worked there 31 years.
The company notified city and county officials to tell them about the planned closing. They also contacted the Georgia Department of Labor and its State Rapid Response Team to coordinate on-site services for employees and help with job search efforts. “We will also be coordinating with other employers throughout the region in an attempt to match the very capable people who will be displaced from our workforce with all available openings,” Aaron said.
“We regret the impact of this plant closing on our loyal and hard-working employees,” said Harry Batty, chief executive officer of SYS. “Our yarn products largely support manufacturers of commercial and residential carpeting. The customers of those firms have been severely impacted by the ongoing housing crisis, the downturn in the commercial real estate markets as well as the ongoing credit crisis. These factors have significantly reduced demand for our products.”
Sylvania Mayor Margaret Evans said the news is bad for the entire community, not just for those who lost jobs. “It saddens me because it has been a pillar of our community for so many years and provided wonderful jobs,” she said. “It has meant so much for our community in so many ways.”

No comments:

These Democratic Women Are Rising Stars and Their Futures are Bright

  Former State Senator and potential '26 gubernatorial candidate Jen Jordan Tift County Board of Education member Pat McKinnon State Rep...