Corrugated box ‘super plant’ may bring 150 to 200 jobs to Dover

October 28, 2020 Off By Sebastian Reisig

Linda Parkowski is cautiously excited about Kent County and the city of Dover’s prospects of becoming the new home of the U.S. Corrugated box manufacturing company, which has been based out of Newark, New Jersey, for the past 35 years.

If U.S. Corrugated continues to move forward on plans to build a mammoth $80 million “super plant” in Dover it could bring with it approximately 150 to 200 manufacturing jobs.

Ms. Parkowski, executive director of the Kent Economic Partnership, cautioned that it’s not a done deal yet.

“Anytime that a new company moves into the area it’s exciting for everyone involved in economic development,” she said. “This company still needs to go through some regulatory hurdles. It’s not a done deal yet, but we’re traded and hopefully the process will go as smooth as possible.”

Dover Mayor Robin Christiansen said that if manufacturing jobs are brought in that it will bring in even more jobs, including those in the service and technology industry, to help support the plant.

“According to a news (report), U.S. Corrugated box company is going to bring anywhere between 150 to 200 jobs, and it’s my understanding that we’ve not really gotten any official notification of it other than the article we were made privy to in the Delaware Business Times,” Mayor Christiansen said.

“I’m excited about it. There are a few more steps of processing that they have to go through, but we’re confident that the last few hurdles are jumpable, and we’re really excited about all of those jobs coming to Dover.”

Ms. Parkowski said the potential manufacturing plant would be a boon for central Delaware.

“The true beauty of economic development is if you bring the jobs in then the services follow – all the other amenities, all the restaurants and the services that everybody’s looking for will follow once you bring the jobs … they come first,” she said.