T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1397.1 | Andover and Hudson Mass. | AKOCOA::OSTIGUY | The Computer is your DATA Wallet | Wed Mar 13 1991 08:01 | 5 |
| The Boston Globe today says either in Andover or Hudson.
Both of those locations already have such plants, one of
which is rumored to be closed.....does not compute !
LLoyd
|
1397.2 | | WAYBAK::LEFEBVRE | Everybody knows this is nowhere | Wed Mar 13 1991 08:26 | 6 |
| Advanced semiconductor manufacturing requires process and production
technology that may not exist, or may not be possible in either
HLO or APO. BTW, Andover is currently not fitted up for volume
production; our facilities were only a pilot line.
Mark.
|
1397.3 | On again, off again | AKOCOA::CORMIER | Lost is a place, too. | Wed Mar 13 1991 08:51 | 5 |
| What about all of the land that DEC owns over in Lancaster? Maybe they
are thinking of that spot?
Linda
|
1397.4 | | BUNYIP::QUODLING | Who's the nut in the bag,dad? | Wed Mar 13 1991 10:15 | 12 |
| Toying is a bad word to use, As I recall the HLO semiconductor facility in
Hudson Mass cost several tens if not hundred of Millions of dollars to set up.
Last I heard, they were going flat out making CPU's etc. Downsizing, does not
mean cutting back on business, it means becoming more efficient. If production
of Silicon is becoming a gating factor in our ability to ship systems, then
setting up a chip plant is a clever thing to do. Bear in Mind also, that when
the "Risc Technology Vaxes" come on stream, a seperate production line will
probably be necessary for them. And building High tech plants like these, does
not happen over a weekend...
q
|
1397.5 | | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Wed Mar 13 1991 11:51 | 14 |
| FWIW,
Digital has already recycled a fab. The first fab in Hudson was shut
down a while ago for being obsolete. The space is being renovated for
new technology and the fab personnel were moved to a more advanced fab
area on the HLO site.
The new plant would be for technology beyond what is currently in
development in Hudson. Seeing as fabrication technology cycles in
about two years, and the time frame for planning, building, and
stocking a new plant would most likely be longer than that, it is
necessary to plan far ahead.
Lisa
|
1397.6 | hint hint | PNO::HEISER | music over my head | Wed Mar 13 1991 12:09 | 11 |
| With the fault lines running thru New England and Silicon Valley, I
think such a facility should be in Austin, TX or Phoenix, AZ. It is no
secret that these areas have very stable ground. That is why
companies like TI, Motorola, Intel, VLSI, and SGS have such large
operations in both of these cities.
And it just so happens we have a 500,000 sq. ft. building in Phoenix
that is empty. I hope they do the right thing for a change and make a
sensible decision.
Mike
|
1397.7 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Mar 13 1991 12:45 | 3 |
| re .6:
And you've got plenty of sand, right?
|
1397.8 | Nope | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Wed Mar 13 1991 13:59 | 13 |
| re:.6
And the money to renovate that building into a wafer fabrication area.
It's not like you can move into a random office building and start
production. You've got to have the proper plumbing and air-filtration
to deal with the hazardous chemicals and ultra-clean environment.
And even more pressing than that, is the money and hassle of relocating
the hundreds of associated people from Mass. to Arizona. It's not like
we hire new people every time there's a new technology, we roll them
over from a previous technology.
Lisa
|
1397.9 | | PNO::HEISER | music over my head | Wed Mar 13 1991 14:02 | 11 |
| re: .7
Yes and if we run out, we know where to get more ;-)
The companies involved in semiconductor fab obviously know something we
haven't learned yet. Delicate work doesn't call for unstable ground as
a prerequisite.
The sad fact is that the move makes too much sense.
Mike
|
1397.10 | | PNO::HEISER | music over my head | Wed Mar 13 1991 14:07 | 20 |
| > And the money to renovate that building into a wafer fabrication area.
> It's not like you can move into a random office building and start
> production. You've got to have the proper plumbing and air-filtration
> to deal with the hazardous chemicals and ultra-clean environment.
Most of which is here since there used to be a PWB shop here. DEC-Tempe
is another possibility since they also have all of the above capabilities.
> And even more pressing than that, is the money and hassle of relocating
> the hundreds of associated people from Mass. to Arizona. It's not like
> we hire new people every time there's a new technology, we roll them
> over from a previous technology.
Yes and you also have LOTS of existing talent that can be recruited
from any of the previously mentioned companies. They don't call this
the Silicon Desert for nothing.
You're right though, I doubt it will happen.
Mike
|
1397.11 | | WAYBAK::LEFEBVRE | Everybody knows this is nowhere | Wed Mar 13 1991 14:36 | 3 |
| Mike, CMOS4 fab is different than PWB.
Mark.
|
1397.12 | | UPWARD::HEISER | music over my head | Wed Mar 13 1991 15:40 | 9 |
| Mark, I realize that. Given our financial state, I question spending
many millions of dollars on a new facility when we could possibly get
away with spending 50% of that.
Even the Thin Film Media process in Tempe (complete with 100 and 10K
class clean rooms) couldn't compare with CMOS4, but it isn't that far
away.
Mike
|
1397.13 | | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Wed Mar 13 1991 15:43 | 18 |
|
When it gets down to the bottom line, the cost of the air-handling
system and plumbing, plus the cost of purchasing the equipment for the
fab is much greater than the cost of the four walls that surround the
fab. What you have in Arizona is four walls. The cost to build those
four walls in Mass. is much less than the "cost" to hire hundreds of
new people to run the new plant and also to fire the hundreds of people
with years of experience that are here now who will be obsolete. It's
like saying, "We have Project X already developed, Project Y under
development, and Project Z which needs to be developed. Instead of
moving the Project X team to Project Z, lets just let them all go and
hire an entirely new team who have never worked together for Project Z."
And as for fault lines, DEC has a manufacturing plant in Sunnyvale.
It survived the earthquake intact. Didn't lose any major equipment.
Lisa
|
1397.14 | | MILKWY::MORRISON | Bob M. FXO-1/28 228-5357 | Wed Mar 13 1991 15:58 | 10 |
| Re .10: Yes, semiconductor fab is quite different from PWB's. It's probably
more expensive to convert any building (other than an existing fab) to a state-
of-the-art fab than to build a new facility from scratch.
Re people: We don't want to lay off people with IC manufacturing experience
in New England, then turn around and hire new people with the same experience
in Phoenix 3 years later. I'm glad to see that DEC is (apparently) going to
keep most of its fab lines in MA, where we can provide new work for our ex-
isting employees.
I estimate that this plant, if it's built, will be up and running in 1994.
Does that sound right?
|
1397.15 | Phoenix a poor choice ..... | CSC32::A_PARRACO | Dances with Woofs | Wed Mar 13 1991 16:21 | 19 |
|
re: Phoenix as a potential site .......
The company, nor the country, should NOT encourage growth in Phoenix,
or Tuscon, or Los Angeles, etc. (anyplace that cannot sustain itself,
please refer to the current drought). There are already too many
people living in this part of the country, living of imported and
state/federally subsidized water from over 1500-2000 miles away.
This type of FAB technology is extremely water-intensive, a very
serious problem that is causing these types of manufacturers a lot
of grief in the Silicone Valley right now.
The desert will someday (soon) reclaim Phoenix, with good cause.
GROWTH is not equal to GOODNESS !
- The Doctor
|
1397.16 | Boston Globe Article | WAYBAK::LEFEBVRE | Everybody knows this is nowhere | Wed Mar 13 1991 16:50 | 76 |
| Boston Globe: March 13, 9991, Business Section, p. 65
{copied without permission}
NEW DIGITAL PLANT FOR ANDOVER OR HUDSON?
________________________________________
SEMICONDUCTOR FACILITY WOULD COST 500 MILLION
Despite Massachusetts' reputation as an expensive place to do business,
DEC is exploring the feasibility of building an advanced, state-of-the-art
semiconductor manufacturing plant here.
The plant would cost up to 500 million to build and would supply Digital
with the critical ingredients for futher generations of computers.
The most likely location for the plant is Andover or Hudson, two towns
where Digital owns land and already has semi-conductor facilities.
Digital's headquarters are in Maynard.
The new facility would be far more advanced than Digital's existing
semiconductor plant in Hudson and would be used to build more advanced
chips that require a higher degree of percision than Digital's existing
facilites offer.
A team of Digital engineers are visiting and evaluating seminconductor
manufacturing facilities- and industry-sponsored chipmaking consortium in
Austin, Texas.
Semiconductors are tiny chips of silicon that function as the brains and
memories of computers. Digital buys many commodity semiconductors from
their manufacturers, but the company makes most of its own microprocessors,
a more complex semiconductor that functions as the computer's brains.
Digital does not sell its semiconductors to outsiders.
Ed Caldwell, manager of semiconductor manufacturing and technology at
Digital, who later this week becomes Vice President of Semiconductor
Operations, yesterday confirmed that Digital is exploring building a new
plant and that the desired location is Massachusetts.
"We do have plans for future factories," said Caldwell. "It's in a very
embryonic stage now."
Caldwell said tht no decision has been made yet on a specific location for
the new plant within Massachusetts. He added that after the semiconductor
group makes its recommendation, the plan will have to go through management
approval. Caldwell said he hopes to see the plan go ahead in this calendar
year.
Digital's plan to invest in a new semiconductor plant comes at a time when
the company is cutting costs in other areas to cope with the changing
economics of the computer market. After incurring its first-ever quartely
loss, Digital broke with its no layoff tradition and embarked on a plan to
shed up to several thousand employees.
Despite the uncertain economy, Digital appears to be sticking to its long
history of making necessary investments in reasearch and development and
new facilities. Just last fall, Digital opened a new semiconductor plant in
Scotland. And a pilot line in Hudson was recently activated, which may be
the precursor to the new plant.
Caldwell yesterday said it is "too early to tell" how many workers the new
chip facility would employ. He indicated that the new plant would likely
draw on Digital's current employee base. "As our older factories become
outdated, especially in the semiconductor area, we like to be able to
recycle people in new facilities," Caldwell said.
In keeping with Digital's policy, Caldwell would not elaborate on what kind
of semiconductors Digital would manufacture in the new plant other than to
say the basic technology would be CMOS, for complementary metal oxide
semiconductor. CMOS chips are popular because they do not throw off a lot
of heat, thereby eliminating the need for elaborate cooling systems.
|
1397.17 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Mar 13 1991 16:56 | 8 |
| I think you overestimate the danger from the New England fault.
Although there is seismic activity here, and there may someday be
another major earthquake like the one 300 years ago, there isn't
a whole lot of shaking going on, and what there is is minor and
infrequent.
/john
|
1397.18 | clarification | PNO::HEISER | music over my head | Wed Mar 13 1991 17:38 | 7 |
| > people living in this part of the country, living of imported and
> state/federally subsidized water from over 1500-2000 miles away.
not that it matters but you have too many 0's there. Where we tap into
the Colorado River is only 150-200 miles away.
Mike
|
1397.19 | Hudson makes lots of sense | YIELD::HARRIS | | Wed Mar 13 1991 21:30 | 29 |
| > And it just so happens we have a 500,000 sq. ft. building in Phoenix
> that is empty. I hope they do the right thing for a change and make a
> sensible decision.
An empty building is not going to save Digital very much if any money
on it's next semiconductor plant. In order to produce a 'class 1'
manufacturing environment they would probably have to gut the existing
building or not use it at all.
There are many good reasons to build it in Hudson(less in Andover IMO).
The biggest one being personnel. By the time Digital's next semiconductor
FAB is completed, the older of the two manufacturing FABs in Hudson
will be obsolete. The people from that FAB (FAB3) could be moved to the
newer one. This would allow Digital to staff the new area without
having to do a whole bunch of hiring or relocating. Also FAB3 in
Hudson will have to close in the next few years(or be re-fitted) to
produce the newer technologies. If this happened and the new FAB was
built elsewhere Digital would have a whole bunch of engineers,
equipment tech and manufacturing people with no work to do.
Digital develops it manufacturing processes in Hudson. Having the
actual manufacturing FAB in Hudson makes bringing up a new process easier
and faster. And in a our business this is very important.
Just my opinion.
-Bruce
|
1397.20 | Your water comes from the Colorado Mountains, far away | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Mar 14 1991 10:35 | 3 |
| Where you tap into the Colorado River may only be 200 miles away, but
the river flowed through waterless desert for 600-800 miles before
getting to your tap.
|
1397.21 | STAND BACK AND SEE THE FOREST, NOT JUST THE TREES. | CSOA1::ROOT | North Central States Regional Support | Thu Mar 14 1991 12:48 | 24 |
| The head waters to the Colorado River go thru/begin in Wyoming and
possibly further north. My sister lives in Glendo Wyoming next to the
South Platte River which flows into the Colorado River. Every one along
the Colorado River wants water and determining water distribution is a
multi-state/federal problem. Everyone wants more then they get. If you
don't balance the distribution there will be no water at the end of the
rivers flow. Just because you want to grow and expand your local
economy does't give you the right to use more water at the expense of
all the others along the river. That includes DEC and all of the other
high tech companies in the Phoenix area wanting to locate and expand
there. That area of the country has had water problems due to the lack
of adaquite rain/snow fall for quite a few years. Not everybody,
(people/industry/agriculture) gets all the water they think they need.
The same is happening throughout the water basins in California.
Everyone has to do with less inorder that everyone will have some water
to use for their needs. Rationing and controlling distribution from
the state and federal level is never easy but is tollerable and
workable if properly orchastrated between all parties concerned.
Time to get off my soapbox now.
Regards
AL ROOT
|
1397.22 | | UPWARD::HEISER | music over my head | Thu Mar 14 1991 13:12 | 10 |
| Re: Hudson retrofits
What will DEC do with the empty buildings after everyone is moved?
Re: water
If we have such a problem, why do areas of New England have rationing
and we don't. Your backyard isn't much better, water wise.
Mike
|
1397.23 | where? | BSS::K_PATTERSON | | Thu Mar 14 1991 13:32 | 5 |
| Geez, the South Platte River is in the Eastern watershed, I
thought, and flows east! The Colo. River is headwatered in the
Arapaho Nat'l Forest. How does the water get over Milner Pass??
KMP
|
1397.24 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Thu Mar 14 1991 14:37 | 22 |
| > Re: Hudson retrofits
>
> What will DEC do with the empty buildings after everyone is moved?
Which building?
> Re: water
>
> If we have such a problem, why do areas of New England have rationing
> and we don't. Your backyard isn't much better, water wise.
Digital has the capability of getting all the water it needs for it's
current FAB at Hudson from an on site well. I'm not sure if it is used
or if town water is used. As far as water rationing, where did you hear
this?
-Bruce
|
1397.25 | | PNO::HEISER | music over my head | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:27 | 8 |
| > or if town water is used. As far as water rationing, where did you hear
> this?
I'm a native of central Mass. DEC brought me out here. My family
experienced water rationing last summer in central Mass. It isn't any
secret that New England is running out of water.
Mike
|
1397.26 | | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Thu Mar 14 1991 16:50 | 24 |
| The production of IC's requires the work of many different groups.
Circuit designers, layout persons, computer tools developers, product
engineers, process development engineers, equipment engineers,
manufacturing personnel, yield personnel, test personnel, packaging
personnel, purchasing personnel, health & safety personnel among
others. It is generally advantageous to have all these people in close
enough proximity so that they can communicate. It would be very
difficult to have half your people in Arizona and half in
Massachusetts and expect an efficient and effective development
process. It's not like you start from zero on a brand new technology,
you draw from older technologies. That's why it's so much more
efficient to roll people over from an older technology. They already
are familiar with the Digital development process and with the
technology that Digital is using to fabricate the chips. It's also why
you can't send half the group 3000 miles away. They need to be in touch
with the older technology group to exchange information about any
sudden problems, or things to avoid in the future.
And as an extra tidbit, I'd say the outer four walls of the fab could
be constructed for about the same amount of money as it would cost to
buy one stepper. Or maybe a stepper and an etcher.
Lisa
|
1397.27 | the rathole goes on | UPWARD::HEISER | music over my head | Thu Mar 14 1991 17:40 | 20 |
| Re: -1
Isn't there a chip design group in DEC-Israel? Don't they build their
designs in Hudson? Didn't DEC open a semiconductor plant in Europe
recently?
As for communications, isn't that what we make computers for? ;-)
Afterall, that was one of our selling points to customers about our
network (i.e., design in Israel, manufacture in Hudson).
I understand what everyone's saying, just don't see how it is very
different than what goes on today. The costs you speak of are an
entirely different issue. I'm still not convinced that a retrofit of
an existing plant would be more than $500M.
What about Austin, TX? The article mentioned this plant will
participate in the Consortium. Do we have a facility down there? Why
couldn't it be built there?
Mike
|
1397.28 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Thu Mar 14 1991 21:27 | 42 |
| > Isn't there a chip design group in DEC-Israel? Don't they build
>their designs in Hudson?
Yes, there are also designers in Japan. Having chip designers in the
same building as process designers and the manufacturing line is a
bonus. I don't think it is very common in the industry. If you asked
the management in Hudson, I think they would say that time to market
has been decreased by having the designers so close to the
manufacturing line(with some products). The important combination is
having the process designers and manufacturing line that uses that
process in same facility.
> Didn't DEC open a semiconductor plant in Europe recently?
And Digital has spent lots of money sending people from one plant to
the other. I myself will probably be going to the plant in Scotland
for the third time next month. Not that I mind, but 100's of round
trips airfare plus logging is expensive. Digital had a few reasons for
building in Scotland. With the SQF FAB and the plant in Ayr Scotland,
Digital is the only company that can go from silicon to finished system
in the UK. This something Digital seems very happy to tell people.
> As for communications, isn't that what we make computers for? ;-)
Phone calls and document transfers just don't do it.
>I'm still not convinced that a retrofit of
> an existing plant would be more than $500M.
Something you don't seem to understand is that the price of the actual
building is a very small percent of the cost of build a FAB. The
equipment that goes in the FAB cost many times more than the building.
> What about Austin, TX? The article mentioned this plant will
> participate in the Consortium. Do we have a facility down there? Why
> couldn't it be built there?
SEMITECH is the consortium you are talking about in Austin. Digital is
a member and has people on long assignments there. Digital could build
anyplace, but the closer to Hudson the plant is the easier it will be
to get the FAB up and running and the easier(and cheaper) it will be to
transition people from the current facility to the new one.
-Bruce_who_doesn't_mind_rats
|
1397.29 | be more specific...... | SOLVIT::DCOX | | Fri Mar 15 1991 08:08 | 12 |
| <<< Note 1397.25 by PNO::HEISER "music over my head" >>>
> I'm a native of central Mass. DEC brought me out here. My family
> experienced water rationing last summer in central Mass. It isn't any
> secret that New England is running out of water.
'tis one of the best kept secrets around. New England is NOT running
out of water. During long, dry summers, some communities have problems
with POTABLE water through community water distribution. In Southern
NH we have had summers when watering the lawn in communities that have
community provided water supply was restricted. However, those folks
with deep wells had no problems.
|
1397.30 | ...and it won't make a bit of difference | IMTDEV::BRUNO | Nuthin' compares 2 U | Fri Mar 15 1991 09:35 | 13 |
| This topic is beginning to sound like a session of Congress.
"As my honorable colleague from Arizona WELL knows, the new Air
Force Base BELONGS in Massahoozits with all the other Air Force Bases.
We cahn't be sending airplanes back and forth all the time."
"To my esteemed fellow Congressperson from Boston, I say you've
got enough Air Force Bases. This one belongs in the middle of the
desert. How else can we justify asking for more water from Colorado?"
Sheesh
Greg
|
1397.31 | | FSDEV2::MGILBERT | Paul Tsongas for President | Fri Mar 15 1991 10:17 | 4 |
|
Bruno, I think you inadvertantly hit on the real reason this
plant will probably be built in Massachusetts. Politics.
|
1397.32 | my final word on this topic | PNO::HEISER | music over my head | Fri Mar 15 1991 12:37 | 8 |
| > Bruno, I think you inadvertantly hit on the real reason this
> plant will probably be built in Massachusetts. Politics.
I agree. DEC is going back to the days of being a Rt. 495 company.
This will also help ease the pain of pending layoffs in the state's
eyes.
Mike
|
1397.33 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Fri Mar 15 1991 15:58 | 15 |
| >> Bruno, I think you inadvertantly hit on the real reason this
>> plant will probably be built in Massachusetts. Politics.
>
> I agree. DEC is going back to the days of being a Rt. 495 company.
> This will also help ease the pain of pending layoffs in the state's
> eyes.
>
> Mike
You guys must be right, you used you infinite knowledge of
semiconductor manufacturing and concluded that the only reason to
build the next plant in Mass was politics. I commend you.
-Bruce
|
1397.34 | | ASDG::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Fri Mar 15 1991 16:34 | 34 |
| Too bad you don't live in Mass., anymore Mike. I'd take you to see
what a fab looks like and explain where all the money goes. I'd also
show you all the people involved with a fab, which might make it easier
to understand why the new plant needs to be within commuting distance
from the old one.
Did you know that all the floors in a fab have to be raised? That
all the air in the fab has to be completely recirculated every few
hours to prevent contamination? That all the fab areas have to be kept
under raised pressure to ensure that particles go OUT of the fab and
don't get sucked in? Imagine the air-circulators that do that.
Or the scrubber system for the waste gases and acids. Some pretty
nasty stuff gets used in processing that needs to be neutralized.
Acids and solvents that must be handled seperately. There's no office
building I know that could handle this.
We just purchased a piece of equipment that weighs 22 tons. Gee, I
wonder if the floor is strong enough for that in Phoenix.
As a very rough guess I'd say that renovating an already exisitng
building would save less than 5% of the 500 million dollar cost of
building the fab from scratch, if it saved anything. If the plant in
Phoenix has more than one floor then all the floors have to come out to
make room for the piping. I would say that some of the roof might have
to come out too, in order to get some of the bigger equipment in (using
a crane). That's assuming that the building was the right height to
begin with.
Lisa
|
1397.35 | PNO is not an office building | CANYON::NEVEU | SWA EIS Consultant | Fri Mar 15 1991 18:58 | 75 |
| re .34
Too bad you don't live in Phoenix, then you would realize that the
PNO building is not just an office structure.
If the major cost of one of these facilities is in the equipment,
then the argument about location is falacious, since it will cost
the same where ever it is built. The PNO folks aren't very happy
that several hundred of them are being layed off while the company
looks to a new facility in Massachusetts.
The 495 syndrome is not necessarily associate with the semi-conductor
building. The Phoenix Mfg plant also housed a distribution center
which was serving our customers west of the Mississippi, but that
is also being brought back to Westminister and Contoocook NH.
The Southwest Financial Management Center in Phoenix is being relocated
to Tempe, but rumor has it that that will be collapsed with the one
from Colorado Springs in the next few years....
The Digital Credit Union Office will be no more after PNO closes, and
even the teller machine in Tempe may be taken out in June/July.
As an employee who went to the field because DEC wanted to get more
resources closer to the customer, shutting down facilities geographi-
cally removed from Massachusetts while opening new one in Massachusetts
seems to contain some political content.
With manufacturing lowering populations in Cupertino and Tempe, but
building new building in Massachusetts? You do have to wonder why
we could develop technology in California and move it to Vermont,
but technology developed in Massachusetts has to stay there?
I would think that if we have 4 years lead time to develop people,
we could train the manufacturing folks in Phoenix to handle the
new technology, but then there is the water issue??? I wish you
had been here last week, when you could cross Union Hills because
the rain created rivers where roads had been. I also am a New England
transplant, for those who think New England does not have a water pro-
blem as great as Arizona's I strongly suggest you contact your local
Watershed Assocation. I was a member of two when I lived there, the
Nashua and Merrimack River Watersheds. When Boston wanted to tap the
Merrimack, we New Hampshires raised a ruckus becuase it might lower
our availability and programs to return native fish to the watersheds.
Lets face it, we have more employees in higher positions in New England
and those folks do not want to lose power or influence by having their
employees located thousands of miles away. So politics will enter the
decision making. We need to minimize the trauma, and planning for jobs
in the future for the employees that have jobs today will help. The
folks out in silicon valley and the silicon desert just wish this plan-
ning had been going on when their jobs were moved off-shore and wish
they had a VP located in close proximity to them to assure them the
next facility building "XYZ" would be in their back yard.
Remember we could decide to outsource all manufacturing activity and
have no need for these new buildings. Others have done it before us
to solve cost and other problems. So don't question the reactions of
those being let go due to the lack of previous planning. There trust
has been fractured by the events of the past six months and they do
not believe the technical explainations defending decisions to build
facilities in New England while we close remote locations.
Those in semi conductor manufacturing who want to save their jobs, may
be right that it is easier and less expensive to re-train people now
involved in current technology than to train equally intelligent and
dedicated manufacturing people in Phoenix. But training will be re-
quired and chosing whom to train and why has political ramifications
as well as financial ones. As the manufacturing folks in the silicon
desert know, there are many jobs here with other companies doing chip
manufacture and assembly right here in the valley. Many wish they had
the option of doing that work or any work for Digital instead.
|
1397.36 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Sun Mar 17 1991 13:58 | 99 |
| re : CANYON::NEVEU
> Too bad you don't live in Phoenix, then you would realize that the
> PNO building is not just an office structure.
It also isn't a semiconductor FAB.
> If the major cost of one of these facilities is in the equipment,
> then the argument about location is falacious, since it will cost
> the same where ever it is built.
There are many cost of which equipment is one of them. Personnel is another
one that would be limited by just adding on to the current facility. No matter
what, even if Digital did build at PNO, they would have to build a new building
to house the manufacturing area. FAB's are like no other normal
building(office, warehouse or assembly). By building at Hudson Digital would
save in many ways of which saving in personnel would be large. because much of
the personnel can come from the current facility. No need to hire from outside
of DEC or relocate people. These position are engineers and techs with
semiconductor experience. So odds are that PNO or any other facility won't have
people to fill these slots. If you build someplace other than Hudson you have
to have an additional plant staff, MIS department... If you just add a
building to Hudson the need for many of these people would be eliminated, and
for others reduced. If this sounds like I want to keep my job so be it, but it
is also true. Also I am currently considering taking a position in the South
Queensferry plant, if Digital opened a plant out west I and many others would
also have the opportunity to go and work there.
> The PNO folks aren't very happy
> that several hundred of them are being layed off while the company
> looks to a new facility in Massachusetts.
I don't blame people for being unhappy, but people are being layed off all
over. Building are also being closed all over. Most of the Andover facility
(which had been used for packaging and testing of semiconductors) has been
moved back to Hudson and people from both Andover and Hudson have been
layed off.
You do have to wonder why
> we could develop technology in California and move it to Vermont,
> but technology developed in Massachusetts has to stay there?
Cupertino creates a finished product, similar to memory(purchased from the
outside), disks(made in Colorado), board(made in Greenville) or any of the
chips build in Hudson. It just a plug in part. "I think" the Cupertino plant
was purchased from a company called Trilogy(?) along with the process used at
that plant.
> I would think that if we have 4 years lead time to develop people,
> we could train the manufacturing folks in Phoenix to handle the
> new technology,
Then you want to spend the money to train people in one place and layoff people
from another instead of just using the people that already are trained? Does
this make sense?
> but then there is the water issue???
Getting fresh water is not a problem. Getting rid of the used water can be.
> Lets face it, we have more employees in higher positions in New England
> and those folks do not want to lose power or influence by having their
> employees located thousands of miles away. So politics will enter the
> decision making. We need to minimize the trauma, and planning for jobs
> in the future for the employees that have jobs today will help.
But does this mean that every decision the company makes is only politically
motivated? Can't it be possible that Hudson would be the logical choice?
The VP of Semiconductors and Interconnect Ed Cadwell is in charge of plants
in MA(Hudson, Franklin and Andover), CA(Cupertino), SC(Greenville) and
Scotland(Ayr and South Queensferry).
> So don't question the reactions of
> those being let go due to the lack of previous planning. There trust
> has been fractured by the events of the past six months and they do
> not believe the technical explainations defending decisions to build
> facilities in New England while we close remote locations.
Many people are being let go in New England also, even people in the Hudson
facility. But because people out west are being let go doesn't make building
out west the right thing to do. Plus as I said before if you build in Hudson
you will just be adding to an existing facility which has it's benefits. If
Digital was just getting into the business of making semiconductors, then it
would be different. But we aren't we are looking to get ready to produce the
next technology and need newer manufacturing area to do it.
> Those in semi conductor manufacturing who want to save their jobs, may
> be right that it is easier and less expensive to re-train people now
> involved in current technology than to train equally intelligent and
> dedicated manufacturing people in Phoenix.
For manufacturing people this might be true, but for engineers(equipment and
process) it wouldn't. Digital would have to hire new people and/or relocate
others.
-Bruce_who_is_begining_to_wonder_if_he_is_in_soapbox
|
1397.37 | Nit | MILKWY::MORRISON | Bob M. FXO-1/28 228-5357 | Sun Mar 17 1991 22:55 | 4 |
| A minor nit re -.1: Newly appointed VP Ed Caldwell's group is called SCO, not
SCIT. He doesn't have Greenville and Cupertino under him. I don't know if there
is still a group called SCIT. SCIT was called SCO before before the PWB business
(Greenville) and interconnect business were placed within it.
|
1397.38 | Lifting off the veil of ignorance | BOSEPM::BARTH | Special K | Mon Mar 18 1991 08:16 | 20 |
| Set mode/totally_serious
RE: .36
Please don't think of this as some sort of pointless SOAPBOXish argument. I am
a software engineer. I have never been to any of our manuf plants in the GMA
and have no plans to visit any of them anytime soon.
I was not aware of any of the trade-offs involved in the build_vs_remodel
decision and I knew nothing about what went into the plants.
This discussion is extremely enlightening. It may not save anyone's job
in PNO. It may not result in mass relocations to a new_and_improved
Phoenix facility. But at least one person is getting a clue as to what
is involved in the decision and some of the reasons people have for their
viewpoints.
Thanks for that, anyway.
K.
|
1397.39 | Article, sme subj, Worcester Telegram (Mass.) | AHIKER::EARLY | Bob Early T&N EIC /US-EIS | Mon Mar 18 1991 09:08 | 16 |
|
Did anyone else see the article in the Worcester Telegram, related
to the new plant ?
There is nothing "official", BUT (the article goes on) .. the new
plan will be new technology, and is most likely to be built in
Hudson Mass (near HLO). Other sites considered are Andover and
possibly the DEC owned land in Lancaster (Mass, near Fitchburg).
The gist of the article seems to be bent toward HLO, and that the
people running it (the Wafer Fab people) need to already be trained.
It would seem, even if the plant were built somehwere else, it would
be staffed with people already experienced in wafer fabrication ??
-BobE
|
1397.40 | It isn't that rosey along 495 either | SALEM::MCWILLIAMS | | Mon Mar 18 1991 10:05 | 103 |
| I sympathize with being caught in business change situation where
there isn't a lot of choice available, but to state that it is the
company policy to move everything into the Rt 495 area is not true.
There isn't a lot of manufacturing left in the GMA (Greater Maynard
Area). Most of it got the ax several years ago.
Marlboro Mfg which in its hey day was much bigger than PNO, is gone
the High End Machines are now built in BTO (Burlington, VT) and GAO
(Galway, Ireland).
All of the Salem's are gone. Salem FA&T (NIO) went the way of the
dodo (it used to build all the 780's and high end PDP 11's). Salem
volume (SVO) was merged with Salem (NIO) and the Scorpio, Nautilus,
and Calypso machines were built. Then the Scorpio was sent to KAO
(Kanata, Ontario), the Nautilus to BTO and GAO, and the Calypso to
GAO and Puerto Rico (AGO/SGO). All of CSS was moved out of Nashua
and Hudson and consolidated in Salem NIO. The Salem proto module
line is in the process of being merged with Maynard's New Product
Organization - about 40 miles down the road.
The WBO Westboro complex modules, and BPO Marlboro hybrid lines
were consolidated into APO - about 40-50 miles up the road. The
modules business was moved out of Andover and sent to Greenfield,
SC.
Westfield, WFO, which used to build the Pros, and the Rainbow, and
other ESB products (and was to have built several other To Be
Announced products) is fading away as their products are transferred
up to Kanata, and out to Ayr, Scotland.
Westminster, which was the last of the FA&T plants became the S/W
Mfg plant, SBB, after a drastic reduction and reskilling effort.
Enfield, CT is going bye-bye, being merged into Springfield, SPO to
it's North.
The only true Manufacturing left in the area is Hudson semiconductors,
and the Springfield, storage products plant. There are low volume
development facilities in Andover APO, Marlboro MOO, Shrewsbury SHR,
Maynard MLO, and maybe some other places that I can't remember
offhand.
There is a committee called the North American Restructuring Committee
or NARC (interesting acronym) who is analyzing plant load across the
company and is rumored to have the task of figuring which plants to
close. Rumors abound about the potential closing of about every plant.
Where Mfg is expanding is overseas ... and not just for supposedly
cheap labor, but for tax and tariff reasons. We just built a
semiconductor Fab South Qeensferry, Scotland to help increase our
European content before the advent of 1992. We built Kaufburen, KBO
for storage products for much the same reasons. We are expanding in
Brazil, because you can't sell in Brazil without local content. We
build in Singapore, ZKO, because of low labor rate and we get Japanese
Memories at no tariff which helps in the GIA area. We build in Puerto
Rico because of tax incentives given to us by the US government.
In almost every case, the local labor rate is not the major cost
component of manufacturing, depreciation of equipment is. The typical
module takes only 1-2 labor hours hours to build and test. 50-60% of
the value added cost is depreciation of all the automated equipment
required to build that module, direct labor is only in the range of
10-20%. Total Mfg costs run only 10-20% of the total transfer cost.
When I am faced with a local tariff of 10-22% of the total product
cost because it is not manufactured locally, it doesn't take a rocket
scientist to figure out that no matter how we improve the the cost to
manufacture in the good ol' US of A, it still is much cheaper for the
company to build a Mfg facility in the locality. That is why most Mfg
is migrating overseas.
When I first transferred up to Salem 10 years ago, there were 1300 folk
between NIO and SVO involved in manufacturing computer systems and
components. Seven years ago there was just NIO and about 700-900 folk.
3 years ago, there was just our New Product Introduction Group of
about 350 people. Last year we were down to 118 people. We numbered 78
by Christmas time, and supposedly we will be down to 55 by fiscal
years end. It still takes several hundred people to introduce a new
computer system, but now those folks come from Puerto Rico and Galway,
many TDY'ed here in Salem for the development phases on the program.
All that is left here in Salem, is the program Mgmt function because
it needs to be near Engineering, and several folk have suggested that
could be accomplished by people from Puerto Rico and Galway either by
use of video conferencing or TDY'ers from those plants.
It now takes us much less time and people to manufacture a computer
system (about an order of magnitude from 780's). Mfg value add as a
percentage of total system transfer cost has dropped from 40% to about
10-15%, and is expected to drop below 10% in the next couple of years.
Consolidation of Mfg has been occurring and will continue to occur. The
dominant trend will be to disperse Mfg to provide local country
content to avoid tariffs.
We maybe building a semiconductor plant along Rt 495, but for the most
part manufacturing as a percentage of company will be decreasing for
the foreseeable future.
/jim
|
1397.41 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Mon Mar 18 1991 10:29 | 21 |
| > A minor nit re -.1: Newly appointed VP Ed Caldwell's group is called SCO, not
>SCIT. He doesn't have Greenville and Cupertino under him. I don't know if there
>is still a group called SCIT. SCIT was called SCO before before the PWB business
>(Greenville) and interconnect business were placed within it.
Sorry about that I wasn't aware the IT was lost. Did they name a new
VP for Greenville and Cupertino to report to, or do they still report
to Bob Palmer? Also I said that Ed Caldwell had Ayr reporting to him.
He is actually only has the Semiconductor assembly and test part of the
facility reporting to him.
>Set mode/totally_serious
>Please don't think of this as some sort of pointless SOAPBOXish argument. I am
>a software engineer. I have never been to any of our manuf plants in the GMA
>and have no plans to visit any of them anytime soon.
Sorry if that comment bothered you, it was directed at a couple of the
previous replies. BTW, my diploma also says software engineer on it.
-Bruce
|