Chadwick jobs loss ‘going to hurt a lot’

Residents sad, understanding of company move

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Sewer Equipment Co. of America announced last month that it will be moving about 70 jobs from its Chadwick plant to a larger facility in Dixon. About 30 jobs will be added in Dixon, where the company hopes to be fully operational by the second quarter of 2013. (Bridget Flynn/bflynn@saukvalley.com)
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“It’s going to hurt a lot,” Castellani, 65, said of the company’s departure from Chadwick. “Since the library’s funded through county money, that’s going to put a dent in the library’s income.”

She followed that statement with a verbal shrug of the shoulders, which is typical of local residents.

“But I understand if you’re a company, you have to do whatever’s better for you,” she said.

The town’s German heritage has something to do with its reaction to the company’s exit, she said.

“You have to understand, this is an almost 100 percent German population,” Castellani explained. “German people are stoic. There was no gnashing of teeth. It was like, ‘OK, roll with the punches.’”

Jeff Daehler, 57, a native Chadwick resident, works in Chadwick Manufacturing’s factory. Sewer Equipment Co. of America has sometimes contracted with Chadwick Manufacturing to make products, Daehler said, and he wore a black baseball-style hat with the sewer equipment company’s logo on it as he drank a soda while sitting outside his workplace.

“I’d like to see them stay in town, but they need more space,” Daehler said.

Sewer Equipment Co.’s new Dixon facility at 1590 Dutch Road has 125,000 square feet, which will double the company’s production space, Wichmann said.

Lauri Allspaugh grew up in Chicago and lived for a time in Sterling, but she and her husband have made Chadwick their home for 16 years, so their children “could have a less stressful environment.”

“I’d like to see them stay in town, but they need to move,” she said. “They have to do what’s best for their business. Where they’re moving is already set up.”

But the loss is sad, she added.

“The town seems to be dwindling, and it’s such a neat little town,” she said. “It has a lot of support for the children.”

The village of about 550 people has not recorded a loss of population lately. Its 2010 population was 551, and its 2000 population was 505, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

The town has low property taxes in its favor, and the people are resilient, McNeal said.

“People here are, I think, ... nothing seems to get the best of them,” she said.

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