TRANSCRIPTEnglish

Governor Of California PANICS As Frito Lay Begins Shutting Down Plants

12m 35s1,913 words323 segmentsEnglish

FULL TRANSCRIPT

0:00

The Fredolay manufacturing plant in

0:02

Rancho Cukamonga is closing after more

0:04

than 50 years in business.

0:06

>> I don't know how folks are going to make

0:09

up for this. Those jobs were full-time,

0:12

year round jobs.

0:14

>> Have the decency not to threaten people

0:17

as they go to school.

0:19

>> A 50-year-old Frito lay plant just goes

0:22

dark, leaving 500 workers clueless

0:24

overnight. And the governor of

0:26

California freezes as the shutdowns

0:28

begin. This is panic disguised as

0:30

silence while California's real jobs

0:32

collapse in real time. If this moment

0:35

doesn't set off alarms right now, the

0:37

next closures won't wait for permission.

0:40

>> As it plans to close its Fredo Lelay

0:42

plant

0:43

>> plant, a factory in Rancho Cucamonga

0:45

that ran for more than 50 years just

0:47

went dark. The machine stopped. The line

0:50

workers clocked out for the last time

0:52

and nearly 480 jobs disappeared without

0:56

a single announcement. Sacramento says

0:59

almost nothing. And that's what makes

1:01

this moment unsettling. Because when a

1:03

plant that fed families for decades

1:06

shuts its doors this quietly, it's not a

1:08

one-off, it's a warning sign. And

1:11

California seems determined to look the

1:13

other way.

1:14

>> Pepsi says the closure is driven by

1:16

business needs. The company says it will

1:18

provide transition assistance, [music]

1:20

career support, and benefits to

1:22

employees who are impacted. This wasn't

1:25

some obscure factory making parts no

1:27

one's heard of. This was a Fredo lay

1:29

manufacturing plant producing Doritos,

1:31

Cheetos, funions, and Tostitos. Snacks

1:34

found in nearly every grocery store in

1:36

America. Products that sell in good

1:38

times and bad times. If a facility like

1:41

this can no longer survive in

1:43

California, then something deeper is

1:45

breaking underneath the surface. Parent

1:47

company PepsiCo Food says manufacturing

1:50

at the plant has stopped, but warehouse,

1:52

distribution, and transportation will

1:55

still be operational. The announcement

1:57

means hundreds of workers will be laid

1:59

off. Several employees tell KTLA they

2:01

were given 10 weeks of severance pay,

2:03

but were not given an opportunity to

2:05

transfer. The shutdown happened in June

2:08

2025.

2:09

Manufacturing ended completely. Over

2:12

half a century of continuous production

2:14

just stopped. What remains at the site

2:16

is telling warehouse operations,

2:19

distribution, fleet, transportation. The

2:22

physical shell still exists, but the

2:24

heart is gone. This is how industrial

2:27

exits actually happen. First, the

2:29

production lines vanish. Then, the rest

2:32

slowly follows. It's never announced as

2:35

a collapse. It's presented as a

2:37

transition, and the human cost gets

2:40

buried in that word. Around 480

2:43

manufacturing workers were laid off.

2:45

Many of them weren't new hires. These

2:48

were long-term employees. People who

2:50

built entire lives around that plant.

2:53

Families where the job passed from one

2:55

generation to the next. When those jobs

2:58

vanish, severance checks don't replace

3:00

what's lost. Benefits run out. Stability

3:04

disappears. And the local economy

3:06

absorbs the hit quietly. one closed shop

3:09

and one missed rent payment at a time.

3:11

>> PepsiCo Fredo Lelay has announced the

3:13

closure of their Liberty food processing

3:15

plant in a statement that they released.

3:18

Quote, PepsiCo Foods US announced the

3:21

closure of their facility in Liberty,

3:23

New York.

3:23

>> PepsiCo says this was about

3:25

restructuring, rising costs, and weaker

3:28

consumer demand. That language sounds

3:30

clean, but the reality isn't. PepsiCo

3:33

still runs more than 30 Fredolay plants

3:35

across the United States. This wasn't

3:38

about chips not selling. It was about

3:40

where it's cheaper and easier to

3:42

operate. California didn't lose demand.

3:45

It lost priority. What makes this

3:47

shutdown even more disturbing is how it

3:49

slipped past the system that's supposed

3:51

to protect workers. California's Warren

3:54

Act exists to make large layoffs

3:56

visible. It's meant to alert employees,

3:58

local governments, and communities so

4:00

they can prepare. But this closure never

4:02

appeared in warrant filings. 480 layoffs

4:06

off the radar.

4:07

>> I don't know how folks are going to make

4:10

up for this. Those jobs were full-time,

4:14

yearround jobs that offered stability.

4:17

>> That raises a serious question. If a

4:19

shutdown of this size can happen without

4:21

formal notice, how many others are

4:23

happening the same way? How many

4:25

communities are being hit before anyone

4:27

officially counts them? This isn't about

4:30

paperwork mistakes. It's about a system

4:32

that only works when companies choose to

4:35

fully engage with it. And then there's

4:37

the governor.

4:39

This silence matters because

4:42

manufacturing jobs are different. They

4:45

anchor regions. They support entire

4:48

ecosystems of small businesses,

4:50

suppliers, and service workers. When one

4:53

goes down, the damage spreads far beyond

4:55

the plant gates. California likes to

4:58

talk about innovation and green

5:00

transitions, but this shutdown exposes a

5:02

hard truth. Not every worker can simply

5:05

pivot into a new economy overnight, and

5:07

many are never invited into the

5:09

conversation at all.

5:10

>> I don't even know how many people are

5:13

going to be out of work here. You know,

5:15

that's going to be a real important

5:16

thing. And and how many people are here

5:19

in Liberty? How many people reside here

5:21

in Liberty? because this could have uh

5:23

you know this this is one of those

5:24

things that could have a a profound

5:27

effect uh throughout the community.

5:28

>> What's happening in Rancho Cucamonga

5:30

fits into a larger pattern across the

5:33

food sector. Factories are closing as

5:35

companies respond to tighter consumer

5:37

spending and economic volatility.

5:40

Food manufacturing used to be considered

5:42

resilient. Now even that safety net is

5:44

thinning. And when food plants start

5:46

leaving, it signals a deeper instability

5:48

that doesn't show up in stock tickers.

5:50

The most unsettling part isn't that this

5:53

plant closed. It's how normal it's being

5:55

treated. No outrage, no urgency, just

5:58

another line item in a corporate

6:00

strategy deck. But for the families

6:02

affected, this wasn't a strategy. It was

6:05

a shock that hit all at once. Now,

6:07

here's where the story really gets

6:09

interesting because once you step past

6:11

the press releases, things start

6:12

sounding very different. We will be

6:15

assisting the impacted workers in every

6:17

way we can, including by providing

6:19

needed services to individuals and

6:22

families and offering the full support

6:24

of our center for workforce development

6:26

in keeping our residents locally

6:28

employed.

6:29

>> PepsiCo's explanation is neat, tidy, and

6:32

perfectly laminated. Restructuring and

6:34

weakened consumer demand. These are the

6:36

kinds of phrases that look great in

6:38

boardrooms and investor calls. They

6:41

slide off the tongue smoothly like

6:42

nothing painful happened. But let's

6:44

translate that out of corporate English

6:46

and into normal human language. What it

6:49

really means is this. The math still

6:51

worked, just not in California's favor.

6:54

Profits needed protecting. Expenses

6:56

needed trimming. And workers were the

6:59

easiest line to erase.

7:01

>> I'm confident that the community will

7:03

rally and uh we'll figure out a way to

7:05

deal [music] with this situation.

7:07

>> That doesn't mean severance and benefits

7:09

don't matter. They do. A severance check

7:12

can keep the lights on for a while.

7:14

Benefits soften the fall. But let's not

7:16

pretend they replace a stable job that

7:18

paid the mortgage, funded college

7:20

savings, and gave people a reason to

7:22

believe next year would look like last

7:24

year. Severance is a bandage. A career

7:27

is a backbone, and one doesn't replace

7:29

the other. Now, let's talk about the

7:31

silence from the top because it's

7:33

impossible to ignore. As of now, there's

7:36

still no verified public statement from

UNLOCK MORE

Sign up free to access premium features

INTERACTIVE VIEWER

Watch the video with synced subtitles, adjustable overlay, and full playback control.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

AI SUMMARY

Get an instant AI-generated summary of the video content, key points, and takeaways.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

TRANSLATE

Translate the transcript to 100+ languages with one click. Download in any format.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

MIND MAP

Visualize the transcript as an interactive mind map. Understand structure at a glance.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

CHAT WITH TRANSCRIPT

Ask questions about the video content. Get answers powered by AI directly from the transcript.

SIGN UP FREE TO UNLOCK

GET MORE FROM YOUR TRANSCRIPTS

Sign up for free and unlock interactive viewer, AI summaries, translations, mind maps, and more. No credit card required.

    Governor Of California… - Full Transcript | YouTubeTranscript.dev