JEFFERSON,
WI -- September 6 — Briggs and
Stratton’s former Jefferson manufacturing facility has been purchased by
Waukesha-based generator manufacturer Generac and although Generac has not
announced plans for utilizing the facility, Jefferson officials said today they
hope it will be used for advanced manufacturing.
“I
can confirm that Generac has purchased the property and we met with some of the
folks from Generac yesterday,” Jefferson City Administrator Tim Freitag told
the Daily Times this morning regarding a Wednesday afternoon meeting with
Generac that also included Jefferson Mayor Dale Oppermann. “I can confirm
Generac is the owner of the property at 900 N. Parkway in the city’s North
Industrial Park, which was previously owned by Briggs and Stratton.”
Briggs
and Stratton moved out of the facility about three years ago. Freitag said it
was his impression that the deal between Briggs and Stratton and Generac for
the sale closed last week. A sale price was not available.
The
facility includes approximately 250,000 square feet of manufacturing,
warehousing and office space. It sits on 18.9 acres. As part of the deal,
Generac has also acquired an adjacent 6.2 acres of farmland that could be used
for facility expansion.
“We
wanted a company like Generac to acquire this property,” Freitag said, adding
the potential for local employment through advanced manufacturing is very
attractive to city leaders. “We talked in fairly good detail yesterday with
Generac officials and they are still putting their plans together. They are
unsure of what they will do at the Jefferson site. They are reviewing their
options for the building.”
A
call from the Daily Times to Generac officials was not returned this morning
and Oppermann told the Daily Times he wanted to reserve any print comment on
the matter until Generac had contacted the media.
According
to its website, Generac was founded in 1959 and “has earned a reputation as the
company that home and business owners turn to when the power goes out.”
It
touts itself as the first to engineer affordable home standby generators, along
with the first engine developed specifically for the rigors of generator use.
“We
now sell more home standby generators than all of our competitors combined,”
the company stated. “We revolutionized the commercial market with the first
cost-effective product line meeting the needs of small and mid-sized businesses.”
Generac
manufactures a wide range of power products, including portable, RV,
residential, commercial and industrial generators.
“We,
down here, are certainly hoping Generac plans to locate a manufacturing
operation in this Jefferson facility, which was built in the 1990s and is well
served by city utilities,” Freitag said. “It is a pretty modern structure and
is one of the biggest manufacturing facilities in the city.”
Freitag
said that during their meeting with Generac he and Oppermann made it clear the
city will do everything it can to aid Generac in meeting with success in
Jefferson.
“They
told us they bought the property and that they were reviewing their options as
how to best utilize it,” Freitag said. “The mayor and I articulated that we
would like to see a manufacturing operation relocated back to that facility and
that we would do whatever we could to help the company pursue its plans. They
said it could be awhile before they could firm up their plans on how it will be
utilized, but this isn’t a company that sits on its hands and it should have a
decision made on usage in the near term.”
Freitag
said city leaders are optimistic Jefferson will see a positive, overall
economic outcome from the sale.
“We
are pretty excited, because Generac is fairly successful and dynamic, and they
have been in the media quite a bit recently about plans for their company’s
expansion,” he said. “The mayor and I are pretty impressed. I think it’s a good
deal for Jefferson because when the Briggs plant closed we lost manufacturing
jobs and that came right along with the economic downturn. It has been hard to
replace those jobs and our collective fear, along with the city’s common
council, has been that a potential buyer would want to put a warehouse in
there. Ware-houses provide fewer jobs and we want the opportunity to put
manufacturing in there ... This could be advanced manufacturing. We think there
is a chance for this to happen and that is our hope.”