PrincetonInfo HomeU.S. 1 Print ArchivesEventsCompaniesHealthClassifiedsDining

Current Issue of U.S. 1

Check out the current issue of U.S. 1 online.

Search our Archives

Compelling reading from nearly a quarter century of U.S. 1.

Interchange

Letters, opinions, and arguments from our readers.

Survival Guide

News you can use for your business or your career.

Preview of the Arts

The discerning guide to what’s happening in Princeton and central NJ.

Fast Lane

Companies on the move, expanding, new in town, or just in the news.

Check the Classifieds

The onllne version of U.S. 1’s classifieds. Click here to post your own.

Murder at the Mall

Click here for the latest installment in the ‘Education of Richard K. Rein.’

Submit Your Event

Tell us about your upcoming event.

Voice Your Opinion

Click here to register your point of view, concern, or correction.

Need Help Navigating?

Click here for a user’s guide, or just call us at 609-452-7000.

What's New in Princeton & Central New Jersey?
Reprinted from the May 11, 2011, issue of U.S. 1 Newspaper
Ocean Spray To Leave Bordentown In 2013
by Scott Morgan

Ocean Spray Inc., the largest producer of cranberry juice drinks in the world and the largest employer in Bordentown, will close its Burlington County plant in 2013 and move its operations to Lehigh Valley in northeastern Pennsylvania.

Speculation that the juicemaker would close its production plant on Park Street in Bordentown City has been swirling since last fall, when the company first told the city that it was looking to move its 250-employee operation.

According to the company, the Bordentown plant (one of seven Ocean Spray bottling centers) is the oldest and most expensive in its inventory. Last year the company overall posted $2 billion in revenue; the Bordentown City plant produced more than 30 million bottles of juice.

Bordentown’s image has been connected with the company since the plant opened in 1943. The city’s annual Cranberry Festival, held every October since 1979, was developed in honor of Ocean Spray. The company is by far the city’s largest employer (many who work at the plant live in Bordentown) and contributes roughly $400,000 annually in taxes.

According to the company, the Bordentown plant is too costly to keep. The company is, however, planning to invest $120 million on its new plant, which will be in a yet-to-be-determined location near Easton.

City Mayor James Lynch and state assemblyman Joe Malone (whose 30th District office is in Bordentown City), have publicly stated bitter disappointment that Ocean Spray is leaving. Malone said that the city and state offered Ocean Spray several incentives to stay, including nearly $40 million in state-sponsored loans and as much as $10 million in tax incentives.

Officials have not said yet what might become of the plant after Ocean Spray leaves in September, 2013. The land, a 62-acre parcel on the edge of town, near Route 206, is zoned for industrial, but rezoning for mixed use reportedly is under discussion.

The subject likely will be part of the Greater Bordentown Area Mayors’ Luncheon, a program sponsored by the Mercer County Chamber of Commerce, on Tuesday, June 9, at 11:30 a.m. at Scottish Rite Hall on Dunns Mill Road. The theme for the luncheon is “Growth In Greater Bordentown: Visions of the Future.” Cost $40. Visit www.mercerchamber.org

Add new comment

 

 

Become a sponsor! Reach the viewers of PrincetonInfo.com and the readers of U.S. 1.