Texas attracted California techies. Now it is losing thousands of them

Back in the halcyon days of 2020, a year we all remember fondly, a new flash point opened in the enduring war between Texas and California. Technologists started picking up sticks in Taxifornia and moving to the Lone Star State in greater numbers. The enemy’s chief newspaper, the Los Angeles Timesworried that Silicon Valley’s “monopoly” was over and wondered if Austin was “the future.” Governor Greg Abbott declared Texas was “truly the land of business, jobs, and opportunity.”

In the wave of stories about Austin’s ascension in 2020, there were always two pieces of evidence given top billing. That year the tech goliath Oracle relocated its HQ to Austin, where it had already built a massive campus on the south shore of Town Lake, and Elon Musk began building a gargantuan Cybertruck factory just outside the city. Austin-area authorities helped Oracle secure valuable lakefront real estate and offered Tesla some $60 million in tax abatements, including $50 million from the historically struggling school district in Del Valle. The new facilities were greeted by state officials as evidence that the “Texas Miracle” was alive and well. Abbott proudly proclaimed last year that Austin was “THE destination for the world’s leading tech companies.”

This week saw a major plot twist in that narrative: Oracle declared it was moving its headquarters to Nashville, and Tesla—the largest private employer in the capital city—announced it would be laying off almost 2,700 workers from its Austin plant after a disappointing earnings report. Texas wasn’t really at fault here. Oracle, which makes business software, cited Nashville’s strength as a center of the American health-care industry, though it surely also helps that the company is getting nearly a quarter of a billion dollars in tax breaks and incentives from the city and the state of Tennessee. Tesla, meanwhile, laid off workers across the country after the Cybertruck suffered significant quality issues that put the future of its Austin production facility in doubt. The city’s debut in auto manufacturing is a vehicle that apparently rusts in the rain. The factory complex, which Musk once promised would become an “ecological paradise,” recently took advantage of a new state law to exempt itself from Austin’s environmental regulations.

Texas Monthly

LazeStar Inc. moves manufacturing operations to Williamson County, Tenn.

California-based LazeStar Inc. Tuesday announced plans to invest $5.5 million to relocate its manufacturing and laser welding operations to Fairview.

The arrival of the 23-year-old company will initially add 25 jobs to Williamson County with expectations to add up to 35 jobs, according to a news release from the state Economic and Community Development Department. At its April 14 meeting, the Fairview City Commission unanimously approved the rezoning of nearly 15 acres off Fairview Boulevard East for the LazeStar property, according to Main Street Fairview.

“LazeStar couldn’t be more excited about the relocation to Tennessee and specifically Fairview,” said CEO Michael Hartman in the release. “We are confident LazeStar is going to thrive in Tennessee. Being in a place that promotes business and supports our future is going to be a perfect match.”

Nashville Business Journal

Memphis-based FedEx plans to lay off up to 2,000 workers across major international market

Memphis-based FedEx Corp. intends to lay off up to 2,000 workers across Europe.

The company announced the plan on Wednesday, June 12. Its filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said the move to cut 1,700 to 2,000 jobs was an effort to “streamline its workforce in Europe as part of ongoing measures to reduce structural costs.”

The layoffs are currently in a proposal stage because they are “subject to local law and consultation processes,” the company said. Those consultations will occur separately in each country in which FedEx wants to cut workers and will proceed along different timelines over 18 months.

According to FedEx’s website, the company began its service to Europe in 1984. It currently employs more than 52,000 people there and has three regional hubs across the continent. Its European operation, which serves 45 countries and territories, is headquartered in Hoofddorp, The Netherlands.

FedEx estimates the pre-tax cost of the layoffs, including severance benefits, to be $250 million to $375 million in cash. The expenses would be incurred through fiscal year 2026. Annualized savings starting in FY 2027 are expected to be $125 million to $175 million.

Memphis Business Journal

Cambro starts construction on East Coast logistics base in Mebane, N.C.

The 300,000 to 400,000 parts made a week at the Cambro Manufacturing plant in Mebane might sound like a lot, but it’s less than half what’s made at the company’s home base in California.

But Mebane is catching up.

Construction has started on a 380,000 square-foot distribution facility that will enable the Huntington Beach, California-based maker of food-service equipment to move logistics operations from its nearby facility and add manufacturing space. It’s expected to in operation sometime next year with 60 employees added over four years, on top of the 145 and growing headcount at the present site.

Triad Business Journal