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T/C Rochester NH Plant Closing

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Pete44ru

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Thursday, December 9, 2010

ROCHESTER ”” Springfield, Mass-based Smith & Wesson Holding Corp is relocating its Thompson/Center Arms operations from Rochester, N.H., to its Springfield, Mass. facility, according to the City biz Real Estate website.

The site posted the news late Wednesday night.

Foster's Daily Democrat has learned the company bused its employees to a meeting at the Governor's Inn Restaurant around 4 p.m. Wednesday. At the meeting company representatives were reported to have said the Thompson/Center Arms facility would be closed over a period of about nine months.

The closure will effect approximately 250 employees, some who may be offered the opportunity to move the company's Springfield operation.

Foster's also learned over the next couple of weeks there will be meetings with employees to discuss severance issues and the possible relocation of some local workers to Springfield. Employees were also told the company was continuing to look for a buyer for the foundry at the Rochester facility.

According to its most recent annual report, the company owns three manufacturing facilities in its firearm division. Its principal facility is the 530,323-square-foot Springfield plant. It also owns a 38,115-square-foot plant in Houlton, Maine, and the 160,000-square-foot plant in Rochester.

The bulk of the $9 million of estimated cash outlays associated with the relocation will occur in the second half of 2011, and those outlays are expected to be recovered in approximately 24 months. The relocation is scheduled to commence in January 2011 and conclude by November 2011.

As a result of the relocation of its Thompson/Center Arms operations, Smith & Wesson expects to record future expense of approximately $6 million, consisting of approximately $3 million for personnel-related exit costs and approximately $3 million of other facility-related shutdown costs, including costs for moving and facility preparation.

The Springfield facility is primarily used to manufacture handguns and rifles; the Houlton facility is primarily used to manufacture handcuffs, restraints, .22-caliber pistols, metal center-fire pistols, and the Walther PPK and PPK/S pistols; and the Rochester facility is used primarily to produce hunting rifles, black powder firearms, interchangeable firearm systems, and long gun barrels.

The company also owns a 56,869-square-foot facility in Springfield that it uses for the Smith & Wesson Academy, a state-accredited firearm training institution, a public shooting facility, and a retail store; and a 6,000-square-foot retail facility in Rochester.

The company leases office and manufacturing space at four facilities in its perimeter security division. The facilities are all located within a quarter mile of each other in Franklin, Tenn. The total space leased is 61,509 square feet.

The company also leases 2,800 square feet of office space in Scottsdale, Ariz., which houses its investor relations department as well as offices for its board of directors, and 577 square feet of office space in Washington, D.C., which houses certain executive staff. Both of these leases expire on Dec. 31, 2010.

Smith & Wesson acquired Rochester, NH-based Thompson/Center Arms, Inc., a privately held, New Hampshire-based designer, manufacturer and marketer of hunting firearms, for $102 million in cash in 2006.
 
I hope that everybody lands on their feet. $3 Mil for employee expenses says that some folks are getting buy-outs or severance pkgs. and some are being moved to Mass.

Hope this all works-out O-K for all those involved.

Dave
 
I'm surprised S&W waited as long as they did to drop the bomb. It's no surprise S&W would move TC to their own facilities though. Several old timers at TC have long since left knowing this was coming.

Hope all your TC's will not need parts or repair until it reopens November 2011 or later in MA.
 
I've got a split personality. The optimist in me sezz it will be an opportunity for TC to do some development with their traditional line. The pessimist in me sezz it will be an opportunity for S&W to dump the traditional line.

Guess which side of my brain is winning at the moment? :(
 
Easy answer I think... all S&W ever wanted is the barrel and investment cast abilities of their business.
 
The bell started tolling on that when they had the fire and lost so much inventory. It just probably got a little louder..
 
What facts do you have that NH is a poorer business enviroment than Mass? I live in NH and our nickname for Mass is Taxachussetts. New Hampshire is way more gun freindly then Mass as well as having a lower tax burden. It also has faired better than the rest of New England in this economy. Now I could be missing something so please enlighten me.

I'm not surprised that TC is moving, I figured it would happen sooner when S&W took over. No loyalty to the people of the state that built the business.

Don
 
Don said:
What facts do you have that NH is a poorer business enviroment than Mass? I live in NH and our nickname for Mass is Taxachussetts. New Hampshire is way more gun freindly then Mass as well as having a lower tax burden. It also has faired better than the rest of New England in this economy. Now I could be missing something so please enlighten me.

I'm not surprised that TC is moving, I figured it would happen sooner when S&W took over. No loyalty to the people of the state that built the business.

Don
Don,
i think he meant it as a retorical question laced with sarcasm. NH seems to be the only gun friendly state in New England.
 
zimmerstutzen said:
Is this signaling the end of the lifetime warranty?


I don't think so as long as it is kept under the Thompson Center name. TC has always been the model when it comes to warranty for American gun makers to strive for. How many others give 100% warranty no matter how many have owned it nor whether the need for repair/replacement was caused by product mismanufacture, product failure, or just normal wear and tear, abuse or accident by an owner. So S&W would be foolhardy to change what their reputation was built on... "IF" S&W continues to offer TC's products at all that is. Yep, I said that!

What has changed though of late is they no longer simply hand out free parts for the asking like they always have for repairs they deemed doable by a firearms owner themself rather than having to send the firearm to them. Used to be you could call and tell you you needed "X" many of this or that and they would send them right out to you free of charge.

TC's warranty has been taken advantage of probably from day one by greedy TC owners, and S&W is finally starting to put the brakes on some of it.

WA
 
OK, I left off the ? mark when I read it. Sounded like a declairative statment read that way. My bad.

Don
 
451whitworth said:
Don,
NH seems to be the only gun friendly state in New England.

Ever been to VT? They are one of the few that allow people to carry a gun anyway they feel without needing a "permission slip", AZ & AK are that way too!

According to the written warrantee, T/C only covers original owners . . . I understand that they have not been too strict on that though . . .
 
Vermont is a strange place. Liberal as all get out but it clings to some old rural Yankee notions like gun ownership. More gun friendly than NH. Pretty state also, if I had to move it would be to Vermont.

Don
 
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