Momentive to cut 80 jobs in Willoughby, taking work to Newark, Ohio, and to China
Momentive Performance Materials Inc. said it intends to cut 80 hourly and salaried workers at its 130-employee Willoughby quartz tubing, fiber-optics and lamp materials plant.
The Albany, N.Y., based company, a spin-off from General Electric Co., will determine the timing of the layoffs during a 60-day consultation with the IUE-CWA, an electrical union allied with the Communications Workers of America Local 707, which represents hourly workers in Willoughby.
Momentive plans to consolidate work at its plant in Newark, east of Columbus. Work force reductions at that plant have thinned employment by almost 100 since fall, including 23 layoffs last week.
The job cuts, including those in Willoughby, are part of a broad set of cost-saving measures in response to a slowdown in Momentive’s business. The company hopes to lower expenses by $40 million.
Specifically, the manufacturer is cutting quartz-related jobs in Willoughby and in Geesthacht, Germany, and moving part of the work at those two plants to its facilities in Newark and in Wuxi, China. The company also said it would temporarily reduce salaries for its top executives by 10 percent and for most professional and administrative employees by 7.5 percent, and require some workers to take an unpaid week off.
Those laid off at Willoughby, some of them members of IUE CWA, may be eligible for severance pay and other benefits, a written statement said. “Qualified employees would also be eligible for tuition reimbursement and retraining benefits for a period of up to 12 months” and, possibly, preferential consideration for employment at other Momentive locations, according to the statement.
The Willoughby plant will remain open and continue to process materials that are used in quartz-product manufacture. Momentive said it did not expect to hire additional employees at the Newark site and will hire only a small number in China.
As of the beginning of April, Momentive had about 4,600 employees globally. It said the salary cuts and furloughs would affect about 2,300 employees and probably would continue through 2009.
The company manufactures silicone materials, sealants and adhesives, special heat-dissipating ceramics and quartz tubing. The products are used in lamps and in the semi-conductor industry as well as in a range of consumer, industrial and medical products.
Momentive grew out of the sale of GE Advanced Materials to equity firm Apollo Management L.P. in 2006. It has become a global leader in the development and manufacture of specialty materials. Momentive’s revenue in 2008 was $2.6 billion.
In addition to the Willoughby and Newark plants, it also has Ohio facilities in Strongsville and Richmond Heights, according to spokesman John Scharf.