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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But the village has had trouble holding on to its high school graduates because not many local jobs can be found, some residents have said.

At age 20, Jamie Rose already has left Chadwick for Des Moines, Iowa, and returned, but she hopes to leave again. She works at Charlie’s Bar in Mount Carroll, and said Chadwick lacks “full-time, steady jobs.”

Adam Price, 27, is a graphic designer at ComplianceSigns.org. A Freeport native, he moved to Chadwick for the job, he said.

“Good for them,” he said of the sewer equipment company’s move. “They’ll be close to I-88.” He is disappointed the company did not move to Freeport, he said.

McNeal hopes the village can find other companies to occupy the buildings that Sewer Equipment is leaving behind.

“Hopefully, we’ll get some new people in the buildings, and it won’t be that bad,” she said.

McNeal said she had tried to persuade the company to stay, including trying to arrange a meeting between her grant writer and the company’s representatives. But the company declined the meeting as it needed a much larger facility and more vertical space to make trucks, not more lateral space, she said. Wichmann confirmed the need for a taller building was a primary reason the company did not want to stay in Chadwick.

According to the Carroll County treasurer’s office, three buildings owned by the company in Chadwick brought in a total of $20,018.46 in property taxes for the county last year, not all of which went to the village.

The village received $3,202.43 in sales taxes from manufacturers in 2011, according to the website of the Illinois Department of Revenue. That came from at least four manufacturers and cannot be broken down by company.

“It’s never good news for a city when a business leaves,” Wichmann said. “But in the same breath, ... while it’s not good news for Chadwick, it is good news for Illinois because we stayed in the confines of the state.”

The company considered a number of Iowa cities, including Clinton and its surrounding area, but decided to stay in the Prairie State after making a deal to get a 10-year tax credit worth more than $800,000 in exchange for hiring and retaining a certain number of employees.

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