GE Gets $5M for 100 Jobs, West Valley Inn Closes Losing Nearly 100 Jobs

GoLocalProv News Team

GE Gets $5M for 100 Jobs, West Valley Inn Closes Losing Nearly 100 Jobs

Almost to the minute as the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation was approving incentives totaling $5 million to GE, word was leaking out that nearly 100 jobs would be lost at the end of August with the closing of the forty-year old restaurant, the West Valley Inn.

GE has been wined and dined to move to RI, but now a couple of days later West Valley Inn has yet not heard from the Commerce Corporation. 

The tale of two economic priorities

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One company, GE, is a global company with over 300,000 employees and $115 billion in revenue. 

The other is a Rhode Island second generation family business, that employs nearly 100 in the economically challenged town of West Warwick.

At Commerce Corporation, Governor Gina Raimondo was pushing through a complex and widely lucrative package to GE that brings 100 new jobs or more to Providence. The jobs are high paying, but there is no guarantee that they are here long-term. Providence is one of three digital centers for GE and the company has made it clear that Providence competes with Atlanta and Miami for long-term growth and even existence.

For the owners and employees at the West Valley Inn, the future is bleak. 

Help from Commerce could make the difference to retain the jobs, says Jeff Butler, Butler Realty Group, RE/MAX.

"Even as our economy gets better, the business climate for small mom and pops - all the way up to larger commercial businesses such as The West Valley Inn, has not been addressed as aggressively, or urgently,” Butler told GoLocal. 

Commerce Corporation has passed along the West Valley Inn to the Department of Labor and Training. “While the company hasn't reached out to Commerce directly they are in touch with the Department of Labor and Training one of the agencies we work closely with under these circumstances,” said Matt Sheaf, spokesperson for Commerce Corp told GoLocal.

There has been no outreach by the Commerce Corporation staff to the owners of the West Valley Inn.

“However, assistance has been offered to lure new companies here or support high tech, small start-ups, many with low employee impact,” said Butler. 

New Vs. Old Economy

According to the Commerce Corp press release, “GE Digital will employ around 100 Rhode Islanders in new advanced-industry, full-time jobs in the near term, with the aim to expand its presence in the state over the next several years. The Providence office will be staffed by a range of professionals in Rhode Island, from experienced engineers and data scientists to young professionals with backgrounds in data, design and IT. GE Digital plans to have in place its full team by 2018, primarily software developers with an estimated average annual salary in excess of $100,000 (and a median annual salary of $88,000).”  

The GE employees are functionally a million miles away from the those waiters, cooks, dishwashers and event managers in the West Valley Inn who will lose their jobs. Many have been with the family-owned businesses for years.

West Valley Inn
Juxtaposition of Raimondo's Economic Strategies

As Rhode Island has few large restaurant facilities, the loss of the West Valley Inn — the home to high school sports banquets, luncheons for senior citizens, and numerous weddings — will mean some of these events will be canceled in the short-term and others may have to move to Massachusetts venues like the Venus De Milo.

"The jobs GE is bringing to Providence are the kind of advanced industry jobs we need to build a competitive economy for the next five years as well as the next 50 years," said Secretary of Commerce Stefan Pryor. "GE will be helping to plan and craft the future of the industrial internet in Providence, and that will have very positive effects on our own economic future."


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