Friday, February 20, 2009

U.S. Steel lays off half its workers at Minntac

Minnesota Democrats continue to play games with "The People's Bailout" the same way they played games with legislation that was supposed to save the St. Paul Ford Twin Cities Assembly Plant.

Over 1,000 Rangers employed in the iron ore mines and taconite industry have now joined the unemployed in the past few months.

What is wrong with these politicians? These politicians owe their jobs to us but they do nothing except pretend doing something for working people.

Working people are being played for fools.

We want to know why Minnesota State Senator James Metzen is dragging his feet in getting "The People's Bailout" through his Committee on Business, Industry and Jobs?

There is no end in sight to the problems plaguing the economy.

Workers have a right to expect those politicians they elected will now bail them out of this mess.

Here on the Range these mining companies have been taking out the profits leaving us with poverty, pits, pollution.

The mining companies run off with the profits; we get stuck with the problems.

This has been going on for over 100 years.

We have been fed the line, "Everything will be alright; recovery is in sight."

The problem is every "recovery" results in fewer and fewer jobs here on the Range. There has never been a recovery. Never.

The time has come to nationalize the steel industry under public ownership... we can do better than United States Steel. We can't do any worse.

We want action not speeches at election time from DFL politicians.

We say to the politicians in the Minnesota Democratic Farmer-Labor Party: You brought forward this legislation called "The People's Bailout" thinking that it would be enough to pull the wool over our eyes again. You knew you had no intent in pushing this legislation through the Minnesota Legislature. You knew you were grandstanding. We call your bluff. Now get this "People's Bailout" out of the Committees in the House and Senate and bring this legislation to a vote so the many hurting and suffering working people can get a little help to get them through this mess.

If there is going to be a recovery then you should have no problem making this help available to workers and their families from time of unemployment to re-employment.

If you can't write this into "The People's Bailout" it means you know there is never going to be a recovery.

If there isn't going to be a recovery, than let's bury capitalism in the pits and start anew with socialism.

Iron Range Club of the Communist Party USA


U.S. Steel lays off half its workers at Minntac


http://www.startribune.com/business/39883292.html?elr=KArksLckD8EQDUoaEyqyP4O:DW3ckUiD3aPc:_Yyc:aUUsZ


By STEVE ALEXANDER, Star Tribune


U.S. Steel Corp. said Thursday it is laying off 500 union and 90 management employees at its Minntac taconite facility on Minnesota's Iron Range, nearly half the plant's workers.

The layoffs, which will occur over the next few weeks, affect two of the Mountain Iron, Minn., plant's five taconite production lines, increasing the number idle to three, said Courtney Boone, a spokeswoman for Pittsburgh-based U.S. Steel.

It was U.S. Steel's second production cutback in Minnesota since early December, when it stopped work at its smaller Keetac taconite plant in Keewatin.

The Minntac layoffs are a response to declining demand for steel products worldwide, Boone said. However, stopping plant production lines doesn't mean they're being closed permanently, she said. The plant's future "depends on U.S. Steel's customer orders and on market conditions," Boone said. At full production, the Minntac plant produces 16.5 million tons of taconite a year, Boone said.

It's unclear how the plant's output will be affected by the layoffs. The Minntac plant had 1,100 union and 180 management workers before the layoffs. The idled Keetac plant previously produced more than 6 million tons of taconite annually.

The layoffs came as U.S. Steel's stock dropped nearly 3 percent to $24.77 Thursday, the day after an analyst reduced U.S. Steel earnings estimates for 2009 and 2010, citing weakness in the market for steel pipe and the firm's pension liabilities and capital-spending expenses.

Steve Alexander • 612-673-4553

E-mail: alex@startribune.com