Pulp and Paper Canada

News Paper Pulp Tissue
Georgia-Pacific to lay off nearly 700 people at Louisiana mill

January 11, 2019  By P&PC Staff


January 11, 2019 – Georgia-Pacific has announced it will lay off nearly 700 people and shut down pulp production at its Louisiana mill as it exits the communication papers business.

The company says that it assessed its long-term competitive position in a declining market that has seen consumers not buying as much paper. As a result, the company will permanently shut down the communication papers machines, related converting assets, as well as the woodyard, pulp mill and a significant portion of the energy complex at its Port Hudson, Louisiana, facility.

Approximately 650 jobs at the facility will ultimately be impacted by the communication papers and pulp asset closures. About 40 business and sales jobs also will be affected by this decision.

Advertisement

Georgia-Pacific will continue to operate and invest in the Port Hudson mill to support its growing consumer tissue and towel business. The company will retain approximately 300 employees to manage those operations.


Related news
Georgia-Pacific mill to cut hundreds of jobs
Florida mill selected for Georgia-Pacific US$400M investment


Employees will continue to operate the Port Hudson communication papers and pulp mill assets, with final operations of those assets expected by mid-March. The company says it has begun discussions with union leadership and the hourly and salaried workforce on how the process will work for employees affected by the job reductions, including the potential to transfer to other Georgia-Pacific locations.

“The employees in our printing and writing papers business have worked diligently to support the business, and in recent years we have invested significantly in our operations. We have ultimately decided that the required investment to sustain the operation long-term, coupled with the declining market, is not viable,” says Mike Adams, president – GP PRO and communication papers. “We will be working closely with our printing and writing customers during this time of transition.”


Print this page

Advertisement

Stories continue below