Workers at endangered Indiana plant feel forgotten by Trump

Published 6:38 pm Saturday, December 10, 2016

HUNTINGTON, Ind.  — A full parking lot and 50-hour workweeks belie the anxiety at the United Technologies-owned factory outside a small northeastern Indiana city, where Mike Harmon and co-workers wonder whether they aren”t just stockpiling parts for when the company sends their 700 jobs to Mexico.

Their situation has gained scant attention compared to the sister Carrier Corp. factory two hours away in Indianapolis, which became a rallying cause against plant closures during the presidential campaign and where President-elect Donald Trump intervened to stem some — not all — job losses.

“I don’t think they look at us, being from a small town …” said Harmon, a 44-year-old Huntington native who’s worked at the factory for seven years. “The whole time during the campaign he talked Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indianapolis, never heard one word about Huntington.”

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It’s a perceived slight that stings in a county where 72 percent voted for Trump and manufacturing makes up about one-fifth of all jobs.

On Dec. 1, Trump and Vice President-elect/Indiana Gov. Mike Pence touted Trump”s role in Carrier deciding to reverse about 800 planned job cuts at the Indianapolis plant — a move that also provides United Technologies $7 million in state incentives. Neither they nor company CEO Greg Hayes mentioned the Huntington plant or discussed the some 500 Carrier jobs still being lost.

Employees at the United Technologies Electronic Controls factory in Huntington say they’ve been working mostly seven days a week since late October, making control panels for the furnace, air conditioning and refrigeration industries. Leaders of their union believe the company is doing so ahead of the factory’s layoffs expected to start in April and continue into 2018.

But Connecticut-based United Technologies said in a statement that its plans haven’t changed. It declined a request to interview a company executive. Hayes has cited a belief that the Trump administration will cut corporate taxes and stem business regulations.

Nationwide, the U.S. Labor Department has issued over 1,600 approvals for layoffs or plant closings since 2015 as a result of shifting production overseas or competition from imports, according to the American Alliance of Manufacturing. Indiana has one of the nation”s most manufacturing-dependent economies even though it has lost 144,000 such jobs, or 22 percent, since 2000.

Trump has warned he’ll impose a 35 percent tariff on goods imported by companies that outsource production, and a week ago on Twitter ripped plans by Milwaukee-based Rexnord to close a 300-worker Indianapolis bearings factory in another production shift to Mexico.

But isn’t clear whether Trump intends to keep personally intervening in corporate decisions. Three days after the Carrier factory trip, Pence told ABC’s “This Week” that Trump will “make those decisions on a day-by-day basis in the course of the transition, in the course of the administration.”

Government leaders have long been involved in cutting deals with corporations, according to Scott Paul, president of the American Alliance for Manufacturing.

“It is a fact of life in the real world. Governors engage in economic development on a regular basis, usually they are trying to attract jobs,” he said. “Countries do the same thing every day.”