Tesla Cuts Jobs In Nevada, Sends Ventilators To New York

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Tesla has reportedly notified officials in Nevada that it is cutting the number of people working at Gigafactory 1 by 75% because of the coronavirus, according to CNBC. “Tesla has informed us that the Gigafactory in Storey County is reducing on-site staff by roughly 75% in the coming days,” Austin Osborne, the county manager, said in a post on the county’s website.

Panasonic is a partner with Tesla at the factory. It says it is laying off workers ahead of a planned 14 day shutdown because of the virus. Panasonic makes battery cells at Gigafactory 1 and Tesla produces motors and battery packs for its Model 3 electric cars there. A request by Reuters for more information about the cuts in staffing went unanswered by Tesla. The Reno-Gazette Journal, which first reported the planned work suspension by Panasonic, says that the company has about 3,500 employees at the Nevada plant. The precise number of workers who will be affected by the Tesla announcement or how long they will be idle is unknown.

Ventilators To New York

A few days ago. Elon Musk announced that he had purchased 1,255 ventilators from China and had them air shipped to the United States. 1,000 of them went to hospitals in the Los Angeles area. The other 255 are now on their way to New York City, where the first of them were expected to arrive on Friday. That got a big thank you from mayor Bill de Blasio on Twitter.

Giving Them Away

Here’s the most important part of this story. When Elon first broke the news about the ventilators he bought from China, he added a little statement that has been largely overlooked. He said he and Tesla would be giving all its ventilators away “whether we buy them or build them.”

That last part is important. Tesla is gearing up to produce ventilators at Gigafactory 2 in Buffalo and it appears from Elon’s statement the company will give them away. That’s significant at a time when General Motors has gotten into a public spat with the US government about how many ventilators it can manufacture and how much they will cost. Apparently, somewhere in the discussions, the figure of a billion dollars was thrown around and the alleged president went ballistic.

He has now invoked the Defense Production Act, which gives the government the power to order General  Motors to make ventilators. The company says it is already planning to do so anyway and will produce the ventilators at cost. No one seems to know what smashing the company over the head with the DPA will do to move the process along faster other than give the Mouth That Roared more raw meat to feed to his “base.” For people who profess to loathe big government, they get positively giddy whenever it uses a sledge hammer to force a state or a corporation to do its bidding.

Meanwhile, Tesla and Musk are quietly going about their business and working to help Americans in need at a critical time. Leadership is not something that happens by posting a tweet. Leadership is making a commitment to do the right thing and then following through. One of the people in this story is showing what real leadership looks like. The other is failing miserably to do so.


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Steve Hanley

Steve writes about the interface between technology and sustainability from his home in Florida or anywhere else The Force may lead him. He is proud to be "woke" and doesn't really give a damn why the glass broke. He believes passionately in what Socrates said 3000 years ago: "The secret to change is to focus all of your energy not on fighting the old but on building the new." You can follow him on Substack and LinkedIn but not on Fakebook or any social media platforms controlled by narcissistic yahoos.

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