Teva won't build in Northeast Philly
Teva Pharmceuticals Ltd., said Monday that it will cease development plans for the property it bought last year on Red Lion Road in Northeast Philadelphia.
Teva won't build in Northeast Philly
David Sell
Teva Pharmaceuticals Ltd. said Monday that it had halted plans to build a $300 million facility on a former brownfield site on Red Lion Road in Northeast Philadelphia.
Distribution, warehousing and computer data functions were planned for the 1.1 million square feet of space spread over three connected buildings. Two hundred jobs were to be moved from existing Teva facilities, 200 new ones were planned, and thousands of temporary construction jobs would have been created.
“Teva recently announced that it would be reassessing its global network footprint,” a Teva spokeswoman said in a statement. “As such, we have made the decision to cease development plans for the proposed distribution center on Red Lion Road in Philadelphia. At this time we cannot elaborate further about plans for this property. Road improvements as committed along Red Lion Road continue and are scheduled to be completed in the spring. Teva remains committed to maintaining the property and working with local government.”
Teva is based in Israel, the company’s Americas headquarter is in North Wales, Montgomery County, and it has a manufacturing facility in Sellersville, Bucks County.
On Sept. 27, 2011, company officials and local politicians gathered with smiles on their faces and ceremonial shovels in their hands to break ground on the Bustleton site that had been used for decades by the Budd Co. to produce railroad cars.
“Not only are we celebrating the commencement of the new building, but starting today, Teva will be an official member of the city of Philadelphia,” Teva Americas chief executive officer and president Bill Marth said at the event.
But a lot has changed with Teva since then, including Marth’s departure from that role and, soon, the company. Shlomo Yanai, who approved the land purchase along with the board of directors, resigned as CEO on Jan. 1 and was replaced by Jeremy Levin on May 9.
Teva is the world’s leading seller of generic drugs, but with almost 80 percent of Americans using generic medication amid greater competition, Teva has struggled to increase profits.
The company’s stock price was $63 per share in March 2010, but closed Monday at 38.39, which is 99 cents above its 52-week low.
In May, Levin was asked at a Bernstein Research investment conference about the company’s facilities and he said, in part, “My question to the organization was, “We've got 74 facilities. How many do we need? Where should they be located? What are the core facilities that you need?’ “
On Nov. 30, Levin said the company would cut $1.5 billion to $2 billion in costs over the next five years, but he was criticized by some stock market analysts for not being specific about the nature of the cuts and how soon they would translate into better profits.
Teva’s Sellersville factory had job cuts and work shifted elsewhere in 2010.
“Over the years, I worked closely with Philadelphia officials and state leaders to encourage Teva to build a distribution center in Northeast Philadelphia. This is a disappointing corporate decision, and a loss for economic growth for the city and the region,” U.S. Rep. Allyson Y. Schwartz, whose district includes the Bustleton area, said in a statement.
“As we move forward, I stand ready to work with the local community and the city to ensure that a new use for the site can be found that both carries the support of the local community and can benefit the people and economy of Southeastern Pennsylvania.”
Mayor Nutter said at the 2011 ceremony that the project was “the biggest economic development project of our administration, and we could not be more excited.”
Deputy Mayor Alan Greenberger said Monday evening that Nutter had spoken with Teva officials after reading their statement and preferred to view the company’s decision as a “pause” in their plans, allowing for possible resumption.
“They are continuing to maintain the property and do the road improvements on Red Lion Road,” Greenberger said. “But they indicated to the mayor that they won’t go ahead right now with this project while they go about their businesswide reassessment.”
I get tired of these corps. holding us hostage. Take a friggin hike. ephraim
Sounds like code for our Mayor and City Council screwed up and could not close another deal to bring jobs to the City and let this one go by the wayside. BigE
They probably read the news about the union and the Post Brothers and decided after all that they don't need that kind of stuff. I'll bet they will build something in a right-to-work state. Wake up Philly! TheGuyfromPhilly
Yo, as opposed to the right to not be paid at all? Mirror
Ah, this is what the 1%ers love. Working folks at each other's throats. They're doing a great job dividing us. Once they get the unions out of the way, it'll be easy. Boru
Where's Ed Rendell and Allyson Schwartz now??? They should be holding a news conference to tell the public their much ballyhooed plans have been scratched. Wonder how much of the taxpayers' money has been squandered on this failed project. Larry Eastwood
On the road to Detroit... Why would any company want to base or expand in Philly? The best part is all the idiots who blame the companies...which is why the red states are doing well and the blue ones are failing. mdm711
No, A right to not fill politicians pockets and stunt economic growth. Taxes and Unions = high unemployment. Proudly a Right-To-Work Democrat. KINGOFZED
Guess that ObamaCare R&D tax made them realize it makes more sense to do development in another country. At least they won't be making any profits in this country. That'll show the evil corporation, eh? theodotius
They buy a perfectly good golf course, close it down, let it turn to weeds and then abandon. The only ones smiing are the guys who sold it. farrelljr
conservatives will say it is because we didn't back up a dumptruck of tax dollars to their front door to encourage them to bring business here. that, and enact a right to work law. we should all be slaves making 6 dollars an hour while corporations pay no tax at all and the executives horde all the profits. the republican ideal world. Ryan- USA has highest corporate tax rate in the world right now (use to be Japan). PA minimum wage is $7.25 an hour. Thanks for checking in.
not_retired
More good jobs going to a more business friendly environment. thanks Unions. jake Montero
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