GOP Senate Candidate Visits Little PA Town Losing Its Plant

It is a recurring story in western Pennsylvania: A company is bought out, the investors want to consolidate or restructure, and the collateral damage is always the cost suffered by the families who depend on those jobs, the communities that will lose their most valued treasure, their people, and the overall sense of loss felt all over the block.

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Last week, Anchor Hocking, a subsidiary of Correll Brands, announced it was closing the plant that has been a fixture in the community for over 100 years, with many families having four and five generations who have worked in their factory.

Anchor Hocking CEO Mark Eichorn told the plant’s 300 workers that at least half of their jobs would be relocated to the company’s plant in Lancaster, Ohio. 

Dave McCormick, the Republican businessman and former Army veteran running for the U.S. Senate, attended a rally held by the workers and told them he was there today to address the situation.

Beege Welborn

I watched a quick snippet of McCormick's visit yesterday. The head of the plant's union was speaking, and she said she'd asked everyone she could think of to come to see and hear what was happening to them. And McCormick was the only one who said he'd be there.

It's also one of the tiny towns the Biden-HARRIS administration has dumped Haitian illegals into. I think I saw they'd had to spend something like $400K just for ELL and translator services for the kids in the elementary schools. And now these jobs are going away.

Who pays for this stuff in a town of, like, 4400 people?

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