News
September 14, 2007
Kellogg boosting jobs at Cary plant by 180
By Amanda Jones Hoyle, Triangle Business Journal
CARY - The big cheese taste is getting bigger in Cary.
The maker of Cheez-It baked snack crackers and Austin-brand
sandwich crackers and cookies is expanding its production facility
off Weston Parkway in Cary and plans to add 180 management and production
positions.
Food producer Kellogg Co., which took over the Austin
Quality Foods manufacturing plant in Cary with its acquisition of
Keebler Foods in 2001, will be hiring for both hourly manufacturing
and salaried managerial positions, says Thuy-An Wilkins, a spokeswoman
for Kellogg.
The expansion will make the Cary bakery the largest
of Kellogg's 25 manufacturing facilities in the country, Wilkins
says. The plant currently employs about 600 people in Cary, where
Kellogg makes most of its single-serving cracker products.
"We are really excited about growing our operations
in Cary," Wilkins says. "It's simply for the growing demand
for our products." She didn't know how much would be invested
in the expansion.
Wilkins says the company will be hosting a job fair
to fill the hourly positions and job seekers can apply through the
state Employment Security Commission. Managerial applicants can
apply through Kellogg's Web site.
Sandy Jordan, economic development director for the
Cary Chamber of Commerce, says he's been working with the company
for about a month in preparation for the expansion, and he says
he was told it was related to potential layoffs at other Kellogg
production facilities.
Jordan confirms that the company will be working with
the community college system to train workers, but Kellogg has not
requested financial incentives.
Kellogg reported strong second quarter sales in July
- up by 9 percent, to $3 billion. Kellogg North America's retail
snacks business, which includes cracker sales, posted 9 percent
sales growth. The overall company recorded $11 billion in sales
in 2006.
Austin Quality Foods traces its lineage to about 1935,
when it opened its first cracker production plant. In 1980, the
company was sold to the Bahlsen cookie and cake company to jump-start
that Germany outfit's U.S. presence.
At the company's peak in 2000, Austin in Cary employed
about 1,300 and posted about $200 million in sales. Bahlsen sold
the Austin plant in Cary to Keebler Foods Co. for a reported $250
million in March 2000.
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