In
a busy factory, machinists move sheets of aluminum roll in the back
door to be molded, stamped, twisted and notched into high-tech electric
cars that sell for more than $60,000 each.
Down
the road in another plant, crews slice solar cells, place them under
glass sheets and create panels that ship by the boxful to Europe.
Elsewhere in this town, industrial workshops and laboratories buzz with
workers building everything from robots to microprocessors.
Welcome
to Fremont, California, a nondescript suburb of 217,000 tucked in the
high-tech region between San Francisco and the Silicon Valley where
something unique is happening: manufacturing.
From
Tesla Motors, making cutting-edge cars, to Solaria, making solar
panels, manufacturers are drawn to Fremont by incentives including a
five-year waiver on business taxes, an expedited regulatory process,
proximity to Silicon Valley firms and a skilled labor force.
Those
were key factors for Sanjiv Malhotra, president of Fremont-based fuel
cell maker Oorja Protonics, which looked at several US cities before
choosing the city in 2006. This year he's ramping up his factory and
doubling his crew to 35 workers, who are paid between $14 and $18 an
hour. All work is done onsite.
"One time, we
tried outsourcing components to China, and that came back to bite us,"
he said. "It was going to save us lots of money, but the quality was so
poor it ended up costing us deeply."
Parminder
Dhaliwal moved to Fremont from a village near Ludhiana, India, three
years ago. He works as a manufacturing engineer at Sonic Manufacturing,
where about 350 workers assemble printed circuit boards, earning about
$15 an hour. He said their location draws business, because many of
their customers, Silicon Valley innovators, want to pop in regularly to
see how their orders are being built.
The
manufacturing industry, along with an Afghan refugee resettlement
program, has made Fremont one of California's most culturally diverse
cities, with 50 per cent of its residents from Asia, and 14 per cent
Hispanic.
"People come here from all over for
these jobs," Dhaliwal said. "Fremont is that melting pot people speak
of. I felt very comfortable going into this community. Everything is
open to me. It really does feel like the land of opportunity here."
Today the city boasts more than 110 manufacturing businesses, including 30 working in clean technologies.
During
a recent visit, Republican Mike Honda, D-California, whose district
includes the Silicon Valley, lauded companies like Apple, Google and
Intel for world-changing innovations, but he said it's frustrating to
see their products made overseas.
"All of
these incredible things have been thought of here, created here and then
are manufactured overseas. We want that manufacturing to come back to
this country," he said. "We can't allow the next generation of
game-changing technologies to be made out of this country."
In
a recent survey of Silicon Valley CEOs, fewer than 1 in 5 said they
were in manufacturing, while more than half were in technology-related
fields ranging from social media to venture capital. Part of the
problem, say local leaders, is that California is one of only a few
states that taxes manufacturing equipment.
"It
is imperative that the state alter this practice to encourage
innovation and job creation," said Dennis Cima, senior vice president of
the Silicon Valley Leadership Group.
Fremont
has a history of being a factory town, largely due to a General Motors
plant that opened there 50 years ago. The plant was shuttered in 1982,
but it reopened two years later as a joint venture for GM with Toyota
under the name New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. When it closed in
2010, 4,600 workers lost jobs, many of whom have now been hired back by
Tesla.
Climbing out of the recession, city
officials orchestrated this rebound, luring new businesses to corporate
parks and still-to-be developed land, selling Fremont's location in one
of the world's major hubs of innovation, right off several major
freeways, and close to several ports. Fremont is also developing a new
BART station to ease commuting throughout the Bay Area, and plans a $26
million downtown upgrade.
"The resources we
are putting behind economic and community development create a vibrant
place that residents can be proud of and a booming environment that
enables companies to create the most cutting-edge technologies and
products in the Silicon Valley and across the globe," Mayor Bill
Harrison said.
At Tesla motors, vice president
of manufacturing Gilbert Passin said that when they came to Fremont
just a few years ago, "we had 10 people tucked into a dark office
somewhere in the factory." Today, 3,000 employees produce more than 400
vehicles a week, he said, and they're still ramping up.
"There
is so much potential to go well beyond where we are," he said. "It's
really a superb product, it's extremely clean and it's very beautiful
and we're very proud to make it here in Fremont."
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