Intel Dramatically Revises Oregon Layoffs to 2,392
OREGON, JUL 12 – Intel cuts over 10% of its Oregon workforce, including 300+ engineers, amid competition from AI chip leader Nvidia, aiming to improve company efficiency, officials said.
- Intel announced it will lay off 2,392 employees across four Oregon campuses starting July 15, 2025.
- The layoffs follow a sharp sales downturn and technological setbacks that weakened Intel's market position over the past decade.
- The cuts affect workers at all levels, including technicians, engineers, and data scientists, mainly at the Hillsboro manufacturing hub.
- CEO Lip-Bu Tan acknowledged that these important adjustments will inevitably lead to a smaller workforce, highlighting the company’s need to return its focus to engineering.
- These layoffs may have broad economic effects in Oregon given Intel’s role as a major employer and existing state tax incentives worth nearly $260 million annually.
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Intel expands layoffs, cutting more than 10% of Oregon workforce
Intel, one of Oregon’s largest for-profit employers, is laying off nearly 2,400 workers in the state starting Monday, the company said in a layoff notice filed with the state on Friday.The cuts at four Washington County campuses affect people in dozens of roles, with high-tech manufacturing technicians, data scientists, software engineers and product developers all losing their jobs. More than 300 module development engineers — the people charge…
Intel now expected to lay off over 2,000 Oregon employees
PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) -- The Intel layoffs are expected to be much greater than initially expected. ‘Things aren’t good’: Prominent Portland businessman says Intel layoffs will impact all of Oregon According to a WARN notice released on Friday, the semiconductor manufacturing corporation is going to lay off 2,392 employees at these four Intel locations in the Portland area on Tuesday, July 15. 3585 SW 198th Ave., Aloha, OR 97078 2501 NE C…
Intel is going through the worst moment of its history, and its new CEO adopts victimism to justify the thousands of layoffs. Is his position as bad as he says?
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