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Jackson County Industrial Development Corporation

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Seymour Council OKs Tax Abatements

Manufacturer, engineering firm plan to add jobs

A longtime Jackson County employer is planning a major investment in 2018 that has the potential to create nearly 250 new jobs.  And a small local engineering company is expanding its injection molding business resulting in the need for two additional workers.

Valeo North America and C&T Engineering both received approval from the Seymour City Council on requests for tax abatements for their projects.

Jim Plump, executive director of Jackson County Industrial Development Corporation, spoke on behalf of both companies.

Plump said Valeo plans to spend $38.4 million to purchase new manufacturing equipment to support its business growth. The business has been producing automotive lighting systems in Seymour since 1978 and has developed several lighting innovations for the industry used by automakers worldwide. It’s estimated the investment will begin in January 2018 and be completed by the end of 2018, allowing the company to retain its current workforce of 1,578 and potentially hire an estimated 245 more. Those jobs will increase the city’s income tax base by $14.8 million.

C&T Engineering will spend $300,000 to purchase new injection molding equipment over the next year. The company, established in 1986, offers customers services including plastic injection molding, tooling, design engineering and production. C&T currently has 10 employees and expects to hire two new people as a result of the investment. The project is expected to be completed by the end of 2018.

Bridging the Digital Divide

On May 9th, 2017, the Jackson County REMC’s Board of Directors unanimously made the progressive decision to provide high-speed broadband services over a fiber optic connection to all of its members in rural Jackson County, Indiana.

The first shipment of fiber arrived on October 13, and construction began on October 30.

Follow the progress on Facebook at Jackson Connect, LLC.

Schneck Medical Continues Expansion

Making room for more doctors

Schneck Medical Center in Seymour, Jackson County, Indiana, plans to spend $44 million in the next couple of years to provide better access to health care.

The need for improving that access by adding 30 doctors and a 5-story building to house them was determined through a process that began with a community needs assessment in 2015, said Debbie Mann, Schneck’s vice president of finance and chief financial officer.

The new facility will be 80,000 square feet and have exam rooms for 45-50 physicians, nurse practitioners and advanced service providers and a parking garage that will hold nearly 400 vehicles.

Mann said with the multi-year, multi-phase project, Schneck is looking at a 5-year recruiting plan.

Learn more about Schneck Medical Center at www.jcidc.com/healthcare.

 

Source: The Tribune, 10.4.17

High-Speed Broadband Coming to Rural Jackson County

Jackson County REMC plans to deliver service to customers in 10 counties, including rural parts of Jackson County, Indiana served by REMC.

The member-owned rural electric cooperative’s plans to make high-speed broadband service available to all of its customers through a fiber-to-the-home connection could have broader implications for southern Indiana.

Those include attracting new businesses and supporting the needs of agriculture and agribusiness in rural parts of Jackson County and parts of 9 other counties.

Officials discussed the project when asking Jackson County Council to approve abatement on the $5.43 million project. “Broadband connectivity has gone from being a luxury to a necessity,” REMC general manager Mark McKinney said.

The purpose of the project is to help prepare the company for the current and future needs of its 20,000 members.

Jim Plump, executive director of Jackson County Industrial Development Corporation, said this is a “win-win” for all involved because it will not only benefit the company and its customers but will improve the quality of life for everyone. He said when it comes to marketing the county to potential industries, this will eliminate a reason for companies to locate elsewhere by making sure infrastructure, including broadband, is in place.

The $5.43 million is the company’s initial investment for Phase I of the project, which has an overall price tag of $20 million just for Jackson County, and $60 million systemwide.

Source: The Tribune, Jackson County, Indiana

Firm to get tax deal for facility; Unanimous vote by council will allow $1.25 million project

A local manufacturer of steel coil wire has plans to build a new warehouse in Seymour’s Eastside Industrial Park.

O&k American Corp. will invest an estimated $1.25 million this year to construct the building on the west side of its plant at 1625 Bateman Drive. Raw materials and other items needed to produce wire for existing and new markets will be stored in it.

The Japanese-based company supplies steel coil wire to automotive, construction and other markets worldwide.

Company vice president Chris White and Mary Winburn with Jackson County Industrial Development Corp. attended Monday’s city council meeting to request a tax abatement, allowing O&k to phase in paying taxes on the project over the next 10 years.

The council unanimously approved the abatement.

Construction of the warehouse is expected to begin this month and wrap up by the end of the year.

Last year, the company completed a 13,500-square-foot addition for a new annealing furnace to treat steal.

That project, including the new equipment, cost $5.2 million.

O&k opened in 2010 in the building that previously had served as a Kobelco Metal Powder of America plant, investing just more than $3 million to renovate the building. Kobelco closed in early 2009.

Between 2010 and 2016, the company invested nearly $35 million more, Winburn said.

As part of the current project, O&k will be working with the Indiana Department of Environmental Management and the city to relocate a ditch on the west side of the property to allow for the expansion.

With the new facility, the company plans to hire two new employees, increasing its current direct hire workforce to 45.

White said the actual number of workers at the plant is closer to 55 when temporary workers are factored in.

“Because of the difficulty in retaining team members, we’ve been using a lot more of the placement agencies while we’re trying to get them on board,” White said. “We want to have them all as our employees.”

O&k and other area manufacturers continue to face challenges when it comes to hiring “qualified and talented workers” from the area, White said.

“We stand ready to support Seymour and the state of Indiana in any effort to improve this condition,” he said.

Mayor Craig Luedeman said low unemployment in the area makes hiring difficult. The unemployment rate in Seymour and Jackson County averaged 3.2 percent a month this past year, and that 3.2 rate was lowest in the state in December, according to the Indiana Department of Workforce Development.

“If someone doesn’t have a job, it’s because they don’t want one or they aren’t looking,” he said.

Author photo

January Rutherford is a reporter for The (Seymour) Tribune. She can be reached at jrutherford@tribtown.com or 812-523-7069.

TECH PARK EXPANDS IN SEYMOUR

Seymour has expanded the boundaries of its certified tech park to generate funding for the Jackson County Learning Center.

Four years ago, the city was granted the tech park designation by the state as a result of the Cummings Engine Hedgehog project, said Jim Plump, executive director of Jackson County Industrial Development Corporation.

A tech park allows the city to receive money from both sales and income tax revenue generated within the park. By state law, the money captured must be reinvested on fixed assets in the park, such as buildings, equipment and infrastructure.

The city had to submit the boundaries of the park to determine where the money could be spent, Plump said. Money was used to help put in a new parking lot, landscaping, sidewalk, road repaving and other improvements around Cummins on East Fourth Street.

“At that time, we drew the boundaries to incorporate the Cummins campus, plus the land to the south of the railroad where Cummins was going to put one of their new buildings,” he said.

Every four years, the city has to recertify the park, a process that was completed this past summer, Plump said.

In discussions and looking at possible uses of tech park funds, it was decided and approved by the state to expand the boundaries to include the learning center. The change was approved by the Seymour Redevelopment Commission and city council on Monday, Oct. 24th.

The learning center houses classrooms for Ivy Tech Community College, Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus and the Seymour Community Schools alternative education program.

Enrollment in programs has continued to increase, and many manufacturers, including Cummins, Aisin and Kremers Urban, use the center for workforce training.

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