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For months, consumers have been less than pleased with the U.S. Postal Service because of slow deliveries and backlogged mail. Now, members of Ohio's鈥
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Startup truck-maker Lordstown Motors is now trading on the tech-heavy Nasdaq stock exchange.Lordstown Motors listed for the first time Monday under the鈥
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Eight kids sit at the conference table pitching their projects: smart phones that expand, fold, fit around their wrists.But the inaugural logistics class鈥
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The company that bought Lordstown鈥檚 former General Motors plant expects to start producing an electric pickup truck there within the next year.Steve鈥
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General Motors is selling a massive assembly plant it shut down earlier this year in Lordstown, a closing that drew threats and scolding from President鈥
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The mayor of Lordstown says his village is still waiting to learn whether GM will sell its idle auto plant to electric truck maker Workhorse. Mayor Arno Hill said he met with GM and Workhorse officials in Columbus earlier this month. But he still has questions, such as who would invest in the plant and whether the company would ask for incentives. 鈥淩ight now, we鈥檙e just in the wait-and-see mode,鈥 Hill said. 鈥淚deally we鈥檇 like to get another General Motors product, so people don鈥檛 have to move out of town. But if that doesn鈥檛 happen, get us some answers.鈥
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Steve Burns is a man of big ideas. In December 2017 he proudly showed off Workhorse's electric pick-up truck to WVXU, was perfecting drone delivery off...
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Members of United Auto Workers Local 1112 are more skeptical than optimistic after the announcement Wednesday that General Motors is in talks to sell its Lordstown plant to Cincinnati-based Workhorse Group, an upstart maker of electric trucks. Many are shocked the company would rather sell the plant than assign a new GM vehicle to be built in Lordstown.
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News about a possible buyer for the General Motors plant in Lordstown is generating a lot of interest in Workhorse, the Cincinnati company involved in the鈥
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New jobs are planned for three General Motors plants in Ohio, and even more new jobs could come to the idled plant in Lordstown. But many unanswered鈥