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The Foxconn Flop in Wisconsin

lpetrich

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Inside Foxconn’s empty buildings, empty factories, and empty promises in Wisconsin
In 2017, President Donald Trump and the Wisconsin GOP struck a deal with Foxconn that promised to turn Southeastern Wisconsin into a tech manufacturing powerhouse.

In exchange for billions in tax subsidies, Foxconn was supposed to build an enormous LCD factory in the tiny village of Mount Pleasant, creating 13,000 jobs.

Three years later, the factory — and the jobs — don’t exist, and they probably never will.

Inside the empty promises and empty buildings of Wisconn Valley.

...
Which is why new recruits arriving at the 1960s office building Foxconn had purchased in downtown Milwaukee were surprised to discover they had to provide their own office supplies. “One of the largest companies in the world, and you have to bring your own pencil,” an employee recalls wondering. Maybe Foxconn was just moving too fast to be bothered with such details, they thought, as they brought their laptops from home and scavenged pencils left behind by the building’s previous tenants. They listened to the cries of co-workers trapped in the elevators that often broke, noted the water that occasionally leaked from the ceiling, and wondered when the building would be transformed into the gleaming North American headquarters an executive had promised.

The renovations never arrived. Neither did the factory, the tech campus, nor the thousands of jobs. Interviews with 19 employees and dozens of others involved with the project, as well as thousands of pages of public documents, reveal a project that has defaulted on almost every promise. The building Foxconn calls an LCD factory — about 1/20th the size of the original plan — is little more than an empty shell. In September, Foxconn received a permit to change its intended use from manufacturing to storage.

b-boy boooo-eebaisse on Twitter: "scott walker's foxconn deal was a corporate grift of epic proportions. just outright state-sponsored theft." / Twitter
noting
Kyle Chayka on Twitter: "Kafka’s Foxconn plant, @verge (links)" / Twitter
Months after the 2018 groundbreaking, the company was racing to hire the 260 people needed to receive the first tranche of payments from the lucrative subsidy package passed by then-Gov. Scott Walker. Recruiters were told to hit the number but given little in the way of job descriptions. Soon, the office began to fill with people who had nothing to do. Many just sat in their cubicles watching Netflix and playing games on their phones. The reality of their situation became impossible to ignore. Multiple employees recall seeing people cry in the office. "The best is when you're in the elevator with somebody and then they just scream out of nowhere," said an employee who experienced this several times. "They've had enough, because things don't make sense here."

"Imagine being in a job where you don't really know if it's real or not. Or you know it's not real, but you don't know it's not real. It's a constant thing you're doing in your head day after day," said one employee, who returned to the rented building Trump had spoken at, where workers had been assembling TVs, only to find the line shut down and the lights dimmed a couple of weeks after the photo op was over. "T think all of us were on the verge of a major breakdown."
 
The Verge on Twitter: "President Trump struck a deal with Foxconn that promised to turn Wisconsin into a tech manufacturing powerhouse in exchange for billions in tax subsidies. ..." / Twitter
President Trump struck a deal with Foxconn that promised to turn Wisconsin into a tech manufacturing powerhouse in exchange for billions in tax subsidies. Three years later, the factory — and the jobs — don’t exist, and they probably never will.

Foxconn had said it would build a 20-million-square-foot LCD complex in Wisconsin. Instead, it constructed an empty building 1/20th that size.

The company said it would aim to employ 5,200 people at the end of this year, a number that was to grow to 13,000. At the end of 2019, Wisconsin found it employed only 281 people eligible under the terms of the contract.

Foxconn attempted to exploit a loophole in its contract with the state by hiring a sufficient number of employees to receive subsidies just before the end of the year. Employees were hired with no actual work to do. Many were laid off after the deadline passed.

Employees describe a toxic workplace, where supervisors often berated and publicly humiliated employees. Many of the original Wisconsin hires have quit or been laid off.

Despite publicly insisting it was building an LCD factory, as early as 2018 Foxconn employees had been asked to figure out a business plan for the company in Wisconsin. Records show Foxconn recently changed the intended use of its factory from manufacturing to storage.

Foxconn’s search for a viable business led it to consider everything from fish farming to exporting dairy to renting storage space. Almost every idea collapsed in corporate infighting and a reluctance to spend money.

Very little manufacturing ever occurred with the Foxconn project. The company has started a small manufacturing line making servers, and now says it is making ventilators, but no employees or state officials could say whether any have been produced.

In the end, the Foxconn debacle in Wisconsin is the physical manifestation of the alternate reality that has defined the Trump administration. Read @joshdzieza’s full story here: (link to The Verge's story)
What a scam it was.
 
So I take it Foxconn got their’s while Walker gave away the kitchen sink for the employment of a couple hundred people.
 
The Libertarian would say the government shouldn't have given money to the company to begin with. Then they'll go to the polls and vote their conscience to oblivion.
 
I seem to remember reading about either this same story earlier, or another that is so similar as be a sense of deja vu, but now I can't find it.

It may have been a plant re-opening somewhere ?
 
Former Governor Scott Walker was a disaster for the state of Wisconsin. He led campaigns against education (especially higher education), voter empowerment, public transit and public employee unions. This is just one example of his ineptitude.
 
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