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New Ghost Towns: Industrial Communities Teeter on the Edge

Posted by Raymond on March 2, 2010

From USA Today:

When Henry Kaiser arrived 55 years ago, this place was no place — “a rural problem area,” the government called it, so poor and isolated that the population had dropped 15% since 1940.That all changed after Kaiser, the industrialist who’d turned out ships and planes at a record pace in World War II, built the nation’s largest consolidated aluminum works here on the banks of the Ohio River.

The plant paid Tim Shumaker his first living wage, and he won the right to keep it two decades ago after his union was locked out for 19 months.

Today, that victory seems hollow. Shumaker, 49, has been laid off. Part of the vast aluminum complex is closed, and the rest is for sale — its orders down, its workforce reduced, its future uncertain. Shumaker stands at the locked plant gate and, after a year without work, worries what’s next for him and his community. “The way things are going,” he says, “there’s not going to be anything here.”

[Read more at USA Today]

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  • 5by5

    Places like this need to start getting Argentina up in there.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LEzXln5kbuw

    ———-
    “An earthquake of popular revulsion drove out six governments in two weeks, but was unable to dislodge the state. Despite a national legacy of murderous military rule in the face of popular movements, crowds overflowed the streets smashing the banks now empty of cash with hammers, all the while singing que se vayan todos – they all must go.

    It wasn’t one party or politician the people rejected, but an entire political culture called simply, el modelo. The ruling elites made corruption a virtue by carrying out the Washington Consensus of neo-liberal austerity and capitalist brigandage. But it was the aftershocks of the uprising that got really interesting.

    Starting at the Brukman shirt factory in Buenos Aires, an escalating series of factory occupations was launched by workers under the slogan “occupy, resist, produce.” Over 200 occupations brought idle factories back to life despite police violence and police obstruction. Unable to withstand the uprising and with the economy in total shambles, the Argentine government relented, allowing for the temporary seizure of abandoned factories by unemployed workers.”
    ———-

    It's clear the mega-corps will abandon communities like this. Fine. But why should you leave the plant? Take it over and run it yourself. You really don't NEED the corporate overlords. REALLY.

    And this is what most scares the corporate types about the grassroots movement in Argentina. It works. And it works without them. It proves that the people at the “top” are nothing more than parasites exploiting the labor of others.

  • Hadrian999

    just out of curiosity, how do you see getting around raw materials supply and trademark issues in the usa if an abandoned factory was occupied by the workers? I’m not being a wise ass(hard to believe but it’s true) this would be a very big issue in the usa, many factories don’t make a finished product but are only a link in a chain

  • Hadrian999

    just out of curiosity, how do you see getting around raw materials supply and trademark issues in the usa if an abandoned factory was occupied by the workers? I'm not being a wise ass(hard to believe but it's true) this would be a very big issue in the usa, many factories don't make a finished product but are only a link in a chain