NEWS RELEASE
Contact: Martina Bar Kochva
48 South Service Road
Melville, NY 11747
(631) 465-3600
PARK ELECTROCHEMICAL CORP. ANNOUNCES
CLOSURE OF
PARK ADVANCED COMPOSITE MATERIALS, INC. FACILITY
IN WATERBURY, CONNECTICUT
Melville, New York, Thursday, January 26,
2012 ......Park Electrochemical Corp. (NYSE-PKE) announced that its Park
Advanced Composite Materials, Inc. (“PACM”) facility, located in
Waterbury, Connecticut, will be closing its operations at the end of
April, 2012 after the completion of the transfer of PACM’s aerospace
composite materials manufacturing activities to the Company’s Park
Aerospace Technologies Corp. (“PATC”) facility located at the Newton,
Kansas Airport. PACM and PATC are wholly owned subsidiaries of Park
Electrochemical Corp.
This transfer of aerospace composite materials manufacturing activities
from the Company’s PACM facility to its PATC facility, together with the
recently completed transfer of aerospace composite parts and assemblies
manufacturing activities from the Company’s Park Aerospace Structures
Corp. (“PASC”) facility in Lynnwood, Washington to its PATC facility,
completes the Company’s plan to concentrate and consolidate all of its
North American aerospace composite materials, parts and assemblies
manufacturing, development and design activities at its PATC facility
located at the Newton, Kansas Airport. (PASC is a wholly owned
subsidiary of Park Electrochemical Corp.) The completion of the
consolidation of the Company’s aerospace composite materials, parts and
assemblies manufacturing activities will eliminate the additional, and
in some cases duplicative, costs which the Company has incurred in
connection with the start-up of PATC and the transfer of such
manufacturing activities from PACM and PASC to PATC.
After the closure of the PACM facility in Waterbury, Connecticut, Park
plans to supply and fully support all existing customers of PACM from
the PATC business unit in Newton, Kansas.
As the result of this closure, Park expects to record total pre-tax
restructuring charges of approximately $3 million. The Company expects
to record approximately half of these restructuring charges in the
fourth quarter of the current fiscal year ending February 26, 2012 and
to record the balance of the restructuring charges during the 2013
fiscal year. After the closure is completed, the PACM business
operations will have no further impact on the consolidated financial
condition or results of operations of Park Electrochemical Corp.
Brian Shore, Park’s President and CEO, said, “Our plan, for the last two
years or so, has been to transfer all of the Company’s aerospace
manufacturing, design and development activities from our PACM facility
in Waterbury, Connecticut and our PASC facility in Lynnwood, Washington
to our new PATC aerospace composite materials and parts manufacturing,
development and design facility located at the Newton, Kansas Airport.
This plan has been well known by our employees, customers and investors.
We recently completed the transfer of all aerospace composite parts
manufacturing from our PASC facility to our PATC facility, and our PASC
facility has been closed. Over the last two years, we have attempted to
develop enough non-aerospace composites materials business (we call it
“specialty business”) for our PACM Waterbury, Connecticut facility in
order to sustain our PACM facility after the aerospace composite
materials business has been transferred from PACM to PATC in Kansas.
Unfortunately, we have not been successful in developing enough
specialty business to sustain PACM as a viable operation and to allow
PACM to remain open. We therefore will close our PACM facility after
completing the transfer of the aerospace composite materials business to
PATC at the end of April of this year. We intend to offer to service and
fully support all of our existing PACM customers, including
non-aerospace or specialty customers, from our PATC facility in the
future. We will be contacting all of our PACM customers, including our
non-aerospace or specialty customers, directly to discuss this with
them.”
Brian Shore concluded “Lastly, to our PACM employees, I would like to
thank you publicly for your years of service to the company. I hope you
will consider applying for relocation to Newton, Kansas. Of course, I
will come to Waterbury to see you personally in the near future. I look
forward to seeing each of you soon.”
Certain portions of this news release may be deemed to constitute
forward looking statements that are subject to various factors which
could cause actual results to differ materially from Park’s expectation.
Such factors include, but are not limited to, general conditions in the
electronics and aerospace industries, Park’s competitive position, the
status of Park’s relationships with its customers, economic conditions
in international markets, the cost and availability of raw materials,
transportation and utilities, and the various other factors set forth in
Item 1A “Risk Factors” and under the caption “Factors That May Affect
Future Results” after Item 7 of Park’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the fiscal year ended February 27, 2011.
Park Electrochemical Corp. is a global advanced materials company which
develops and manufactures high-technology digital and RF/microwave
printed circuit materials principally for the telecommunications and
internet infrastructure and high-end computing markets and advanced
composite materials, parts and assemblies for the aerospace markets.
Park’s core capabilities are in the areas of polymer chemistry
formulation and coating technology. The Company’s manufacturing
facilities are located in Singapore, China, France, Connecticut, Kansas,
Arizona and California. The Company also maintains R & D facilities in
Arizona, Kansas and Singapore.
# # # #