Boeing considers moving 1,400 jobs to Kent

Transfers could start in first quarter of 2019

Boeing considers moving 1,400 jobs to Kent

Boeing is considering moving 1,400 jobs to Kent next year from its other Puget Sound-area sites.

Kent Mayor Dana Ralph revealed the news during her Nov. 6 report to the City Council.

“They are bringing somewhere between 1,400 and 1,600 new jobs to the Kent Valley,” Ralph said after meeting the previous week with Boeing representatives. “About 800 could be here by the end of first quarter.”

When told about the mayor’s announcement, a Boeing spokesman released the following statement:

“We’re in discussions on relocating some current Puget Sound-based positions to Kent which could have the capacity for as many as 1,400 employees,” said Boeing spokesman Paul Bergman in an email Monday. “Planning is still underway and we don’t have any further information to share at this time.”

Ralph said the decision to move jobs to Kent had to do with where the company’s employees live. Boeing’s Kent facility sits along the West Valley Highway between South 199th Place and South 208th Street.

“They are excited to bring these employees here,” she said. “They did some surveying in different departments and it showed the majority lived in the south end, south of Bellevue.”

The relocation of employees to Kent would reverse Boeing’s trend over the last several years to move employees out of the city. The company announced in November 2016 that it would move 1,000 positions from its Kent site to Tukwila between 2017 and 2020. Bergman declined to comment about how the latest plan to move employees to Kent impacts that decision.

The decision in 2016 was part of a nationwide change by Chicago-based Boeing to operate its Defense, Space & Security business more efficiently through facilities consolidations and work movements.

In 2014, Boeing announced that about 2,000 jobs in its defense division would go to other cities, mainly St. Louis and Oklahoma City. Most of those 2,000 employees were at facilities in Kent and Seattle.

Boeing sold off 70 acres at the Kent Space Center property along South 212th Street in 2013 to the IDS Real Estate Group and Clarion Partners. Amazon.com, Inc., built a nearly 1 million-square-foot fulfillment center on the property, which also includes the Stryker Business Center at Pacific Gateway. Crews demolished several large, former Boeing buildings to make room for the new project. Amazon opened its fulfillment center in 2016.

Boeing opened the Space Center in 1964 in Kent. The company has employed as many as 5,000 at the site. City officials estimated about 500 now work in Kent.

If Boeing brings more jobs to Kent, however, city officials are ready to have them.

“We are excited to welcome nearly 1,500 new employees to the Kent Valley,” Ralph said.


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in Business

Kent-based Blue Origin recently mated New Glenn’s first and second stages. COURTESY PHOTO, Blue Origin
Kent-based Blue Origin signs rocket launch contract to deliver satellites

Reaches agreement with AST SpaceMobile to use New Glenn to send satellites to space

Joshua Harris is a U.S. Army and National Guard veteran who runs a security company out of Kent. Courtesy photo
King County veteran selected to national business-growth program

In October, South King County-based company Cascadia Global Security was chosen to… Continue reading

Paul Raftis (right) of Paolo’s Italian learned how to cook from his mother, Darlene Risse Raftis (left). Courtesy photo.
Vittoria! Paolo’s Italian wins big

It’s been a good month for Paolo’s Italian Restaurant in Kent —… Continue reading

Best of Kent 2024 winners announced!
Best of Kent 2024 winners: See the list here

Check out the Kent Reporter’s special section.

t
Maggie’s on Meeker owner receives state Entrepreneur of the Year Award

Honor given to Raman Arora at statewide conference in Walla Walla for bringing Main Streets to life

t
Kent-based Blue Origin completes 27th mission to space

Company debuts second vehicle in efforts to meet growing customer demand to board flights

(Photo from The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Public Health Image Library)
Health insurance premiums to rise for WA small businesses

This marks the highest increase for small employers in the last decade.

t
Top Pot Doughnuts opens new production facility in Kent

Company plans to open cafe at site in early 2025

(Screenshot)
Ladybug coffee stand co-owner sentenced for tax evasion

At his Oct. 9 sentencing hearing, U.S. District Judge Tana Lin stated, “there is no excuse for hiding half a million dollars in a life of privilege, except greed.”

t
Airways Bistro & Beer Garden to close in downtown Kent

Lengthy patio renovation, higher rent help lead to closure after 13 years; Tap Room to remain open

t
Kent Reporter, Steve Hunter, Ben Ray receive newspaper coverage awards

At Better Newspaper Contest presented by Washington Newspaper Publishers Association