RI Loses 1,000 Jobs in Less than a Week - Leaders Weigh In

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

RI Loses 1,000 Jobs in Less than a Week - Leaders Weigh In

First Benny's, now Alexion -- two RI employers are closing their doors, to the tune of 1,000 jobs.
Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo is usually the first to announce when there are good job numbers to report; however she has been noticeably absent regarding the loss of nearly 1,000 jobs impacting the state and region, from Benny's decision to close all its stores -- costing some 700 jobs -- and now Alexion Pharmaceuticals pulling out of Rhode Island and chopping 250 jobs. 

"The loss of the Alexion jobs, those are high paying jobs with fringe benefits. That transcends just the 'number,' said University of Rhode Island economist Len Lardaro. "Will those skilled people be able to find jobs here or will they migrate?"

The Commerce Corporation released a statement on Tuesday in response to Alexion's departure, which comes just one year after it broke ground in the summer of 2016 on $200 million expansion project in Rhode Island. The Governor's office refused comment, however. 

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SLIDES: See What RI Leaders Are Saying BELOW

"Right now, we're doing fairly well, compared to where we've been," said Lardaro. "But because Rhode Island hasn't reinvented itself the way it should have years ago, we can only go as far as the national and Boston economies pull us."

"Do we have enough margin for error? I'm not sure. We haven't gone as far as we should have," said Lardaro. "Rhode Island's approach to planning and development is primitive and backward. We don't have due diligence -- we're amateurish."

As GoLocal reported this week, following retail giant Amazon's announcement it is looking for a new, second headquarters location which would mean 50,000 jobs, the Raimondo administration has had little to say, while other states are publicly putting together leadership teams and strategies to make the case to lure the game-changing business. 

State Role in Alexion

With Alexion's departure, Commerce clarified that it hadn't offered any financial incentives to keep the company.

"[We offered] no financial incentives as part of their recent proposed expansion," said Matt Sheaff with Commerce. "We did help navigate state and local approvals needed for the expansion -- planning, zoning, soil erosion and traffic. We also helped with a land swap that was important for the transaction."

Last summer, Alexion stated that what had been intended to be a $200 million expansion would have meant 400 jobs in the state.

Now, Rhode Island is watching Alexion move its operations up to Massachusetts. 

"In a prior administration, Alexion received as part of the Jobs Development Act a reduction in their corporate income tax," noted Sheaff. 


Benny's & Alexion Jobs Gone - Leaders Weigh In

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