Manhole Cover Maker Shifts Manufacturing to Distribution

Staff
By Staff
2 Min Read

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Nina Foundry, a maker of manhole covers and

other iron castings,

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announced that it plans to close its plant in

Lincoln, Nebraska by the end of the year.

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Nebraska Public Media reported that the company

intends to reopen the closed manufacturing

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facility as a distribution center on January

1st, 2026.

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Nina Foundry notified the state Labor

Department that 103 workers would lose

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their jobs as a result of the permanent

shutdown and noted that the non-union facility

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would not offer bumping rights.

It did not disclose how many people a

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distribution center will employ.

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The company stated that it reviewed its

production facilities and despite investing in

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the Lincoln location over the past 3 years,

determined that its operations had excess

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manufacturing capacity.

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It pointed to changes in the castings market,

including low cost imports from India that

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represent a meaningful percentage of the

domestic market.

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The Lincoln plant began operating in 1964 as

Deer Foundry,

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which Nina acquired in 1998.

According to the EPA,

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the site includes a two-story, nearly 72,000

square foot secondary iron casting foundry,

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two material storage buildings, material

storage areas on concrete pavement,

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and parking lots.

Nina currently operates two other manufacturing

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sites in Miami, Florida and in its hometown of

Nina, Wisconsin.

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The company’s website lists 12 distribution

centers.

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I’m Nolan Bastein.

This is Manufacturing Now.

 

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