Idaho Town Struggles After Pinning Hopes on a Failed Factory By 
KIRK JOHNSON
Bill Schaefer for The New York Times November 5, 2013    
The administration building of
 the Hoku Materials polysilicon plant sits vacant on 67 acres in 
Pocatello, Idaho. The $700 million Chinese factory never went into full 
operation. 
POCATELLO, Idaho — With great fanfare, a Chinese polysilicon factory 
broke ground on 67 acres here in 2007. Then, as the rest of the nation 
tumbled into recession, the plant rose up in shimmering promise, leaving
 this tough-edged railroad town — blue collar and union in a sea of 
southeast Idaho potato farms — feeling pretty good about the future.    
    
Bill Schaefer for The New York Times
Wooden crates of equipment, some never opened, sit 
stacked in the factory, which was to make materials used in solar 
panels. A public auction last month brought a high bid of $3.7 million. 
                           
So what if the company wanted breaks and concessions? The decision by 
the city to buy the land and lease it back almost free seemed like a 
bargain at $1.4 million, given the potential payoff.        
Subcontractors and suppliers from around the nation and world were also 
arriving to build the $700 million plant, and discovering — so residents
 and business leaders hoped — Pocatello’s small-city charm. And the 
hundreds of production jobs in the end would be a big step toward the 
dream of a high-technology future, picking up where railroad and 
manufacturing jobs had faded.        
Now, 18 months after shutting completely, the factory, which was to 
produce materials used in solar panels, stands ghostly and silent. It 
never went into full operation, and in the global collapse of silica 
prices, it probably never will, solar industry experts said.        
Wooden crates of equipment, some never opened, sit stacked where they 
were left, like time capsules from a lost world. And instead of being 
discovered by entrepreneurs and venture capitalists, Pocatello’s name — 
linked to a bankrupt company accused by its biggest American creditor of
 fraud and racketeering in a federal lawsuit — has now rippled out in 
all the wrong ways, residents said.        
“It makes me sick thinking about the waste,” said Brian C. Blad, the mayor of this city of 54,000 people.        
At the downtown federal courthouse where the bankruptcy of the Hoku 
Corporation is unfolding, lawyers for unpaid creditors — looking to 
collect, not spend — have descended in force. Hoku collapsed with about 
$1 billion in debts, and a list of unpaid creditors in more than a 
half-dozen states and countries. They include big names like Oracle and 
KPMG, the accounting firm, and small contractors like Industrial Piping 
Inc. of Pineville, N.C., which has about 300 employees, and a $13.6 
million unpaid Hoku invoice.        
“The debacle in Pocatello was a very large hit,” said T. J. Bucholz, a 
spokesman for Industrial Piping, which is majority-owned by an equity 
capital company in Grand Rapids, Mich. “We’re not General Motors.”      
  
Pocatello’s road was tough before Hoku ever came to call. It lost many 
of its good railroad jobs when Union Pacific consolidated operations in 
Utah. A potato processing factory in a neighboring town — about 10 
percent of the work force commutes there from Pocatello — has said it 
will close next year. And like Idaho as a whole, it has suffered from a 
downward spiral in wages.        
From 37th place in per capita income in the mid-1990s, the state is now 
49th, kept from the bottom only by Mississippi, according to federal 
figures. Part-time jobs have been among the fastest-growing employment 
categories in recent years, with almost one in four jobs statewide 
offering less than full-time hours — the fifth-highest rate in the 
nation. Many downtown businesses are vacant and up for lease, and the 
struggling local shopping mall is scheduled to go up for auction this 
month.        
Booming areas within driving distance, such as the energy drilling areas
 in North Dakota and the strong economy of Salt Lake City, two hours to 
the south, have kept the local unemployment rate below the national 
average. But that only masks the trouble, residents said.        
“It’s one of Idaho’s greatest failures,” said Roger Chase, Pocatello’s 
former mayor, talking about jobs and low pay scales. Mr. Chase struck 
the deal with Hoku and was running again on Tuesday for his old job 
against Mr. Blad. But in a mostly civil campaign, neither man is blaming
 the other for how things turned out.        
In addition to the local land deal, Hoku also got $2.2 million in 
federal grants for solar development, according to federal officials, 
and a promise of job training money from the state.        
Another economic rescue with Hoku’s glamour and promise is not on the 
horizon. Mr. Blad, in an interview in his office, said a big employer 
had recently expressed interest in coming here, bringing perhaps 1,000 
jobs. But the company, which he declined to name — a warehouse 
distributor that does most of its sales over the Internet — has said it 
would offer $10 an hour, only a few dollars above the minimum wage.     
   
The company even had the audacity to ask for financial incentives, which
 the city has politely declined. “We would welcome them, and we would 
value them,” Mr. Blad said. “But I can’t justify taxpayer dollars for a 
$10-an-hour job.”        
The Hoku pain is not over yet, either. In August, the former general 
contractor at the plant, JH Kelly, based in Longview, Wash., and owed 
$24 million, sued Hoku’s majority owner in China, Tianwei New Energy 
Holdings. The federal suit accuses the company of fraud and racketeering
 in promising that bills would be paid.        
Lawyers representing Tianwei did not respond to email and phone requests for comment. Meanwhile, a public auction of the plant,
 held last month, only rubbed salt in the wound: The top bid for the 
vast works and all they contain was $3.7 million. A bankruptcy court 
judge will decide this month which bid or combination of bids is best 
for the creditors. 
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/06/us/idaho-town-struggles-after-pinning-hopes-on-failed-factory.html 
[SIDEBAR:  Charley Hale, Mayor of Portland, Oregon, is said to be in China at this time and no doubt the same ole story.  Chinese nationals were invited to America, HANK PAULSON & Via AIG?!  Opium Wars really haven't been forgotten and now ITS' BLOWBACK and China is the first to discover gun powder AND look at the mess in the USA 'DERIVATIVES' that the Chinese have gambled quite knowingly as 'partners' in downsizing 'freedom' too much, in USA.]
Two Words: Mony Sovereignty. The so called 'leaders' of the USA sold the country to the highest bidders of owning DERIVATIVES to fake the global human population into believing 'leaders' are necessary for this type of business model in 2013.
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