Chrysler to add 1,800 jobs at northern Ill. plant

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Sergio Marchionne, chairman and CEO of Chrysler Group LLC, right, talks with Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn Thursday before Marchionne announced that Chrysler will add a third shift at its Belvidere plant to begin production of the 2013 Dodge Dart. (AP photo)
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BELVIDERE (AP) – Chrysler said Thursday that it is hiring 1,800 new workers and increasing production at its plant in Belvidere, a once-dominant manufacturing area that now has the state's highest unemployment rate and has been battered by the economic downturn.

The news, some said, should provide both financial and psychological boosts to a region more accustomed to headlines about layoffs and closures. About 23,000 people in the Rockford-Belvidere area were unemployed in December in a workforce that numbers about 167,000, according to state figures.

Chrysler said at an on-site news conference that about 500 of the new employees will work on the new Dodge Dart while the others will work on the existing Jeep Compass and Liberty models. All are expected to be hired by the third quarter of this year. The plant already employs about 2,700 people and creates hundreds of other jobs at nearby parts suppliers and other vendors.

Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne acknowledged the area's struggles when he spoke to several hundred workers assembled at the sprawling plant. Chrysler laid off almost 1,000 employees in Belvidere in 2008 before emerging from bankruptcy with new owners.

"I know that times you've endured in the recent past were not easy," Marchionne said. "In 2009, when we emerged from bankruptcy, there was only one shift that was running here ... with little hope and tremendous uncertainty."

Unemployment in Boone County, where the plant is located, was a state-high 14 percent in December. Winnebago County, where Rockford is, had a jobless rate of 12.2 percent.

Gov. Pat Quinn, appearing with Marchionne, cheered the creation of more manufacturing jobs in an area where Chrysler is the largest employer and just over 19 percent of the local workforce is employed in manufacturing.

"Manufacturing is the key part of our American economy and our Illinois economy," Quinn said.

Chrysler said this week that 2011 was its first profitable year since 1997. Three years ago, it briefly shut down the Belvidere plant, leading to fears that the facility might close for good.

The new jobs are tied to a 2010 package of $62 million in state tax breaks and other incentives given to the automaker. Those tax breaks could grow if company adds more jobs, though the milestones Chrysler would have to reach to receive the maximum state perks haven't been set, said Marcelyn Love, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity.

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