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Dan River acquired by Indian
company
by Heather
B. Hayes
for Virginia Business
February 2006
When the news came, no one was really
that surprised. In late December, Dan River Inc., a
textiles company that once was Danville’s largest
employer, announced it was being bought by Gujarat
Heavy
Chemicals Limited (GHCL), an Indian soda ash maker.
Dan River recently had emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy
proceedings.
GHCL acquired more than 90 percent
of the company in a deal worth $93 million — $17
million in cash plus the assumption of $76 million in
short- and long-term debt. Dan River provides high-end
home fashions and apparel fabrics to major retailers
such as Wal-Mart, JC Penney, Linen & Things and
Bed, Bath & Beyond. GHCL is hoping to leverage the
Dan River acquisition to transform itself into a major
textile player.
GHCL didn’t immediately reveal
its plans for Dan River, which at the time of the deal
employed more than
1,600 people, 1,100 of whom worked in Danville. Within
three weeks, however, Dan River announced it would
close
its Schoolfield plant in March, cutting 500 jobs. The
company also plans to eliminate an undisclosed number
of white-collar jobs by May. Dan River is expected
to
have 500 to 600 Danville employees after the latest
round of job cuts. Company officials say the cuts were
planned before the GHCL deal.
Peter Kilduff, an associate professor at the University
of North Carolina in Greensboro, told The Associated
Press that GHCL would be wise to hang onto Dan River’s
brand name, retailing contracts, manufacturing capabilities
and easy distribution access to North American markets.
“They can ship a significant portion from India.
But for customer confidence, they will also need local
operations that can be responsive to short-term customer
demands.”
Laurie Moran, president of the Danville Pittsylvania
County Chamber of Commerce, says the community is still
assessing the economic effects of the sale. She notes
that, for the past decade, Danville has watched the
slow, steady decline of its once-booming textile industry.
Dan River is only a shell of the company it was during
World War II, when it employed more than 14,000 workers.
The good news, Moran says, is that “the community
has worked really hard to transition itself away from
the textile industry and, while it will be a difficult
for a while as people have to retrain and find new jobs,
we do believe that we’re in a position to actually
move on to bigger and better things.”
The city has created job training and technology education
programs. Local companies that once relied heavily on
business from Dan River have managed to target new markets
during the past several years.
And in the past 18 months, Danville has added 2,500
new jobs, Moran says, as existing firms have expanded
and new firms from a range of industries have moved
into town, including Luna nanoWorks, Telvista, Yorktowne
Cabinetry, EIT, Inc., and Boscov’s, a Pennsylvania-based
chain of department stores.
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