Smoky Mountain News | November 11, 2020

Page 12

news November 11-17, 2020

Spring registration open at HCC Haywood Community College registration for spring semester is now open for both new and continuing students. Students will continue having the option of taking hybrid or fully online courses in Spring 2021. Due to the ongoing COVID-19 response, on-campus activities will be limited to primarily technical skills and lab-based courses. The Computer-Integrated Machining program will start an evening cohort this spring. This program is a great fit for people who enjoy technology but also like to create and build things with their hands. HCC’s Information Technology program is available completely online. With more and more people working from home, a skilled Information Technology professional is behind the scenes to ensure programs are running smoothly and the risk of cyber-attacks are kept low. For students planning to pursue a four-year degree, working from home during the pandemic is the best way to complete transfer requirements at a fraction of the cost. Instead of putting your degree on hold or taking a gap year, HCC offers classes to keep you on track so that when the time comes, credits will transfer to any college in the University of North Carolina System. Most students qualify to receive tuition assistance through the HCC Foundation, in addition to federal financial aid programs. For more information about registration, visit www.haywood.edu or email hcc-advising@haywood.edu.

FOR SALE

Smoky Mountain News

BY BOYD ALLSBROOK CONTRIBUTING WRITER efore the Coronavirus pandemic and subsequent lockdowns gutted U.S. commerce back in March, the Canton Consolidated Metco manufacturing plant was thriving. This leading supplier of molded plastics for semi-trucks provided nearly 500 jobs for workers in Canton and the surrounding towns. Good manufacturing jobs are harder and harder to come by; that this international corporation would open a branch in Haywood was a major boost to the regional economy. This all changed as the trucking industry slowed in the chaos of spring 2020. The Canton plant was forced to lay off 120 workers to combat significantly reduced demand for their product. “When we laid the employees off at the end of March that was 100 percent due to Covid,” said Everett Lynch, human resources director at ConMet in Canton. “We just didn’t have the orders because the truck plants were also down.” Now, however, they’re ramping back up. In a world where online shopping has become the norm, parts for semi-trucks have never been in higher demand. “If you think about Amazon, we make parts for every truck they have,” said Lynch. This resurgence in shipping has enabled ConMet to rehire every worker they laid off in the spring. “We’ve already brought all of them back,” Lynch said. Even better, as the economy recovers by the day, ConMet has begun actively hiring new talent. “Right now, we are in a position where we’re needing additional labor because of where the market’s at,” Lynch said. “We are direct hiring right now.” This is excellent news for the local economy. Manufacturing jobs are solid indicators of economic health. As plants like ConMet rehire and grow, we can look to the mountains’ postCOVID market at large for recovery.

B

ConMet’s plant in Bryson City remains closed, however. After stripping the factory down to a skeleton crew in 2018, ConMet’s been largely silent on the future of the Bryson City location. Many one-time workers from Swain now commute to the Haywood County plant. “We don’t have plans there [Bryson City] at the moment,” said Lynch. “We’re focusing in on Canton.”

Lynch encouraged anyone in search of a job to consider ConMet. “I don’t think a lot of people know about us,” he said. “Right now, we’re just trying to get our name back out there. We’re an employee-owned company, we have our own stock, our benefits are super competitive. We are direct hiring, and we just want to be the key leader as far as places to work in Haywood county.” David Francis, head of Haywood County’s economic development council, is excited about the implications of a resurgent ConMet. “It’s great news for a fast recovery, great news for the town, great news for Haywood county,” he said.

FOR SALE

114 Banjo Hollow Lane • $669,000

JUST LISTED

4894 Soco Road • $375,000

JUST LISTED

737 Setzer Cove Road • $350,000

JUST LISTED

242 Way Up Yonder • $475,000

INVESTORS SPECIAL

79 M & M • $200,000

12

Canton’s ConMet now hiring

154 Raby Street • $55,000

BEVERLY-HANKS.COM

Pamela Williams

RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL BROKER ASSOCIATE EMAIL: PAMELAWILLIAMS@BEVERLY-HANKS.COM CELL: (803) 528-5039 OFFICE: (828) 452-5809


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.