CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (Statehouse News Bureau) — Jeff Allen has been interviewing for jobs for the first time since he graduated high school. He’s 56.

There are efforts to stave off the Pixelle Specialty Solutions plant closure
Pixelle and its now-parent, the private equity firm H.I.G. Capital, took over at the paper mill in 2019. Before that, even as management came and went, residents often referred to it as the Mead paper mill.
Pixelle’s closure was imminent at first. Then, U.S. Sen. Bernie Moreno said he convinced H.I.G. to delay until Christmas.
That was Good Friday, when he and other elected officials brought together a large crowd of residents on the edge of Chillicothe. They celebrated, flooding the sunbaked parking lot of a credit union, the faded red-and-white smoke stacks puffing behind them.
Now, according to another government mandated WARN mass layoff notice, Pixelle maintains it will shutter Aug. 10. Moreno sees the move as a “total disgrace,” he said Thursday, but is confident the site will grab another owner.
“I’m proud of the fact that our involvement at least got 60 more days of payroll than it would have otherwise,” Moreno said in an interview.
The bliss from the Good Friday rally didn’t last long for Allen.
“(Pixelle) came in and basically said we fired our customers and we’re trying to get them back,” he said.
So for months, workers new and old have clocked in and out under a cloud of uncertainty. Some machines are already out of service. The majority of Allen’s colleagues, those who haven’t already fled, could get as little as one week of severance, he said.
Here’s what comes next
The rest of the community in Chillicothe is scrambling to figure out what comes next, too.
“If you had told me to guess at what that number was going to look like, I would have never said $1 billion for the state of Ohio, because I wouldn’t have thought that broadly,” said Mike Throne, chief executive officer of the Chillicothe Chamber of Commerce.
Throne is referring to an economic analysis done on the paper mill and the region in May, which concluded the plant contributes an additional 1,100 indirect jobs and 750 induced jobs statewide. Closing it could leave a $78.4 million hole in state tax revenue.
“It’s a declining market for what they did there and it’s not sustainable for the long haul,” he said.
So behind the scenes, federal and state offices, like Moreno’s, are holding weekly strategy meetings. The state’s powerful, private economic arm, JobsOhio, is courting potential buyers with lucrative incentive packages.
Throne is grateful for all the attention, but he said Chillicothe can take care of itself—he’s also relying on the retired HR executives in town holding mock interviews, the neighbors reading over resumes.
“I don’t need the government to hand me a pile of money right away,” Throne said, “but I need them to be available and ready.”
Allen doesn’t look to federal or state officials, either. He blames the private equity firm cutting what feels like those final paychecks.
“They couldn’t make it work. They couldn’t get the customers, they couldn’t get the orders, and I’m not sure how hard they worked at it,” he said.
As of July 9, several interested parties had put bids out with Pixelle. As they wait, Throne, with county and city leaders, is collecting signatures on a letter to H.I.G begging the firm for more collaboration in what they calls this “critical economic transition” for the region.
