Archives
 By  Staff Reports Published 
1:42 am Tuesday, April 2, 2002

Burlington denim plant phases out'

By By Fredie Carmichael / staff writer
April 2, 2002
STONEWALL The final months of Jo Dearman's 31 years of service at Burlington Industries' denim plant has been anything but a time of reflection.
Dearman, the office manager, said her workload has increased dramatically since Burlington officials announced earlier this year that the plant was shutting down.
Thursday was one of the worst days for Dearman. That was when the bulk of the plant's employees about 250 worked their last day on the job.
The North Carolina-based textile company filed for bankruptcy last year and announced it would shut down several of its manufacturing plants including Stonewall.
Burlington had been Clarke County's largest employer and has been operating the Stonewall mill since 1962. The plant has been in operation for more than 100 years.
So far, nearly half of the plant's more than 800 workers have been laid off. The rest will formally lose their jobs on a week-by-week basis until the end of April.
After that, a skeleton administration crew will remain at the plant until May or June.
Tony Smith, the Burlington plant's human resources manager, said the company is half-way through with its "phasing-out process of the plant."
Smith said the first employees to go were about 125 mostly entry-level workers on March 23. Then, he said, another 250 plant workers were let go last week.
The only positive thing to come from the closing process, Smith said, has been the many companies that have visited the plant to recruit employees.

Also on Franklin County Times
‘All we did was done fully’
Main, News
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
December 17, 2025
THARPTOWN — Glenda Amelia Aycock-Long has lived many chapters, each distinct, each demanding, each shaped by her willingness to say “yes” to the next ...
Patriot Riders give ‘brother’ full honors
Main, News, Russellville, ...
Kevin Taylor For the FCT 
December 17, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — Vietnam veteran Avery Brewster finally received the full military funeral he deserved. Local American Patriot Riders escorted a hearse ...
Ayers, at 90, still a pillar of community
Main, News, Phil Campbell, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
December 17, 2025
PHIL CAMPBELL — Barbara Ayers, who taught economics at Phil Campbell High School for more than three decades, remains engaged in the life of the commu...
A jolly good time was had by all
Franklin County, Main, News, ...
December 17, 2025
Community members gathered last week to celebrate the season with annual Christmas parades in Russellville, Red Bay, Vina and Phil Campbell. Parade wi...
Garden club hosts ‘Every Light a Prayer for Peace’
News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
December 17, 2025
RUSSELLVILLE — Community members gathered at the Franklin County Courthouse on Thursday for the annual “Every Light a Prayer for Peace” ceremony hoste...
Cyber criminals target holiday shoppers
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
December 17, 2025
Online scams have grown more sophisticated in recent years, making it harder for people to tell legitimate businesses from fraudulent ones. Members of...
State has chance to get data center boom right
Columnists, Opinion
December 17, 2025
Every day, we read about massive data centers coming to the Southeast. Billions of dollars. Thousands of construction jobs. The promise of economic tr...
Baker reaches 1,000 career points
High School Sports, Phil Campbell Bobcats, Sports
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
December 17, 2025
PHIL CAMPBELL — Phil Campbell High School senior Leela Baker has added her name to a small group of Franklin County athletes by scoring the 1,000th po...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *