Posted: 5:37 p.m.
Thursday, Jan. 7, 2016
Could Middletown
win a new corporate headquarters?
By http://www.journal-news.com/staff/chelsey-levingston/" rel="nofollow - Staff Writer
MIDDLETOWN —
After
beating other sites to win http://www.journal-news.com/news/news/groundbreaking-today-for-new-ak-steel-36m-research/nmgh6/" rel="nofollow - http://www.journal-news.com/news/news/two-year-construction-project-to-build-middletown-/nn92m/" rel="nofollow - Why
can’t Middletown
try to win back the business that got away — AK Steel’s headquarters?
It’s
a hard-to-forget turn-of-events in the city’s over 100-year relationship with
the Fortune 500 steelmaker and its predecessor company American Rolling Mill
Co., founded in Middletown
more than a century ago.
“People
are still upset about the fact that they left town,” said Steve Bohannon, a
newly-elected city councilman, owner of Bohannon Roofing Co. Inc., and chairman
of Middletown Real Estate Investors Group.
On
the campaign trail last fall, Bohannon vowed to do what he could to bring AK
Steel’s headquarters back to Middletown.
The new politician can share his ideas with city staff and show the city cares
about business by being responsive to requests, he said.
In
2007, AK Steel announced plans to move its headquarters from the http://www.journal-news.com/news/news/local/former-ak-steel-hq-reduced-to-rubble/nMkjN/" rel="nofollow - to a newly-built facility several
exits south in growing West Chester Twp. About 300 employees made the move, http://www.aksteel.com/news/press_release.aspx?doc_id=561&year=2007" rel="nofollow - Since
then, AK Steel has not quite reached, but is approaching 10 years since it
leased the West Chester space.
The
company has not made any announcements regarding a headquarters relocation nor
made any related discussions publicly.
“We
continue progress on construction of our AK Steel Research and Innovation Center
in Middletown, however there are no plans to
move our headquarters to Middletown,”
said AK Steel spokeswoman Lisa Jester in an email.
Middletown is still home to AK
Steel’s largest steel plant, and AK Steel is still the city’s largest employer
of about 2,100 hourly and salary workers at the steel plant and the existing
research center. However, Bohannon wants to see the high-paying office jobs
come back.
“I
don’t know if AK would even want to be interested in coming back to Middletown,” Bohannon said
this week, acknowledging that during his campaign he didn’t know all the
reasons the headquarters left in the first place.
The
point of bringing it up now, Bohannon says, is Middletown needs to attract more corporate
office jobs from either AK Steel or another company or companies.
“We
need a corporation of a large magnitude with large salaries to come to this
town to put us back on the map in an economic standpoint,” he said.
http://www.aksteel.com/news/press_release.aspx?doc_id=561&year=2007" rel="nofollow - state-of-the-art technology, more
convenient face-to-face interaction with customers, suppliers and other
constituents; and attraction and retention of top professionals “who desire
proximity to the abundant amenities and services available in the West Chester
and northern Cincinnati
area.”
The
city would like to win back AK Steel’s headquarters, but there’s not any
contemplation of it that Mayor Larry Mulligan Jr. said he’s aware of. But he
agrees with Bohannon that winning any headquarters or major corporate
back-office or support-office would be a boost to the city.
“AK
was a wake-up call… to make sure we’re paying attention to all companies large
and small,” Mulligan said.
Since
AK Steel announced intentions to move its headquarters, Middletown has stepped up its game to be more
competitive, Mulligan said. For example, http://www.journal-news.com/news/news/middletown-doubles-down-on-business-retention-effo/nhGZZ/" rel="nofollow - Also,
the city acquired about 18 acres of land east of the interchange with Ohio 122 to help attract
more development, he said.
“We
just need to make sure we’re staying close to the business community on all
fronts,” Mulligan said. “When AK was ready to consider doing the research
facility, we were ready to move on it.”
The
AK Steel headquarters office building located on Centre Pointe Drive is owned by the
Massachusetts-based real estate investment trust Franklin Street Properties
Corp., according to property records, and the trust’s website, http://ir.franklinstreetproperties.com/CorporateProfile.aspx?iid=4065591" rel="nofollow - “West Chester is a partner in the region’s economic
development ventures,” said township Administrator Judi Boyko in a written
statement. “West Chester openly competes for
market projects, but does not poach projects or companies. Rather, West Chester focuses on enhancing those amenities and
attributes which attracted quality residents and corporate citizens in the
first place; and focuses attraction efforts on ‘new to market’ investors and
companies actively seeking alternatives to their current locations.”
“AK
Steel is a valued stakeholder and the premier Fortune 500 corporate citizen in West Chester,” Boyko said. “AK Steel identified West
Chester’s amenities and accessibility as valuable to their operations and West Chester continues to invest in these attributes not just
for the benefit of AK Steel, but for all our corporate neighbors and
residents.”
THREE WAYS THIS MATTERS TO YOU
1. TOP EMPLOYER. AK Steel is still Middletown’s
largest employer with about 2,100 workers in the city, according to the
company. That’s followed by Atrium
Medical Center,
which has approximately 1,500 workers, according to the hospital. AK Steel
announced in 2015 plans to build a new $36 million Research and Innovation
Center in Middletown and started construction on the project that has been seen
as a positive development in the city’s and steelmaker’s relationship.
2. MORE JOBS WANTED. The whole city has seen employment grow to an estimated
19,800 working residents in November, which grew 7.6 percent from a low of
18,400 employed residents at the beginning of 2013, according to Ohio
Department of Job and Family Services.
However,
employment is still 18.5 percent shy of the 24,300 working residents on average
in 2005 before the national recession — and the lockout of union workers at
Middletown Works — started, according to the state estimates.
3. NEW FACES. The new year brings new faces on Middletown City Council
such as Steve Bohannon and Talbott Moon. Meanwhile, Middletown is interviewing candidates for a
new economic development director. New council members and a new development
director could lead to new strategies for business recruitment.
Also, http://www.journal-news.com/news/business/who-is-ak-steels-soon-to-be-ceo-roger-newport/npDsR/" rel="nofollow -
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