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The (NYSE: NCR) will move its headquarters and 1,250 jobs to Ga., as well as opening a 550,000-square-foot manufacturinb operation in Macon, Ga., that will employ up to 880 Officialsfor NCR, which has 1,300 workersx in Dayton, could not be immediately reache for comment Monday night. An official from Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland'se office, who spoke to the Dayton Business JournalMonday night, said NCR’s CEO Bill Nuti told Strickland that the compang has been eyeing Georgiaq for some time now. The , with local officials expressinhg frustration that the company was not responding totheirr requests. Georgia Gov.
Sonny Perdue is expected to make the official announcement Tuesday with NCR receivintg tax incentives from the local officialsin Georgia. “Theg (NCR) can’t recruit talent to move to Ohio,” a source told the Chronicle. Montgomery Countgy CommissionerDan Foley, sounding stunned when reacher Monday night, declined comment. In the letter Stricklane sent to NCR dated Monday and obtained by the Dayton Business Journal, the governor said he was trying “to take one last opportunity to urge you to continus your operations in Ohio.” In the letter, Ohio offer s NCR $31.
1 million worth of incentives to keep the operations Strickland's spokesperson declined official comment until the announcemen t is made. NCR's departure woulfd leave a vacant 1.3 five-story office building near Dayton's downtown that is alreadh hurting from high vacancy rates and jobs that have been leaving the city duringv the pastseveral years. The loss of 1,300 high-payingh jobs from the city will have a negativd impacton Dayton's income tax receiptsa at a time when the city has faces multi-million dollar budget deficits that have caused it to reducde its workforce and cut services.
Rashadx Young, Dayton city manager, said the city reached out to NCR multiple times inrecent months, and that the city did all it coulfd to engage the company. Ohio State Sen. Jon Husted, R-Kettering, said he will retain hope untilp the company makes anofficial announcement. “We have on multiple occasione reached out to NCR in an attemptt to identify ways to secure their jobs and grow and be successfuplin Ohio,” Husted said Monday evening. “jI am not willing to give up Phil Parker, president and CEO, left a voice messags after business hours for a reporter Monday sayingh he hadno information.
Toni Bankston, director of marketin and communications for theDayton Chamber, did not returj calls seeking comment. The Daytom Chamber is one of the lead private groups in the city responsible for retention ofexisting companies. In October, NCR said it woulx move its Worldwide Customer Services headquarters to anAtlanta suburb, investiny $15 million and creating more than 900 jobs in the suburbes of Peachtree City and Deluth. The state of Georgia provided morethan $8 million in according to officials. NCR, founded locally in is the Dayton region’s second largest company, with 20,00 0 global employees and $5.3 billion in revenue in 2008.
The company, whicu sells ATMs and retail automation systems, is Dayton’se lone remaining Fortune 500 company. At one the company had more than 18,000 employeews in the Dayton area, but that number has dwindle during the past several As recently as twoyears ago, NCR had aboutg 2,000 Dayton employees. That number has declined by about 700 workerzsince 2007. In 2007, NCR announced it was relocating its executive offices to New York City and leasingv an entire floor of the 7 Worl d TradeCenter building. But, on its headquarters remainedin Dayton. In the company also told employees it is undergoinb a structural reorganization and would cut an unknowb amount of itsglobal workforce.
That same the company removed thelanguage “world from the sign at its Dayton though it said at the time it was just temporary.
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