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150 Toyota jobs to go on Deeside (BBC News) Jobs 'safe' after £5bn deal lost (BBC News) Dairy company to create 60 jobs (BBC News) Jobs picture turns brighter (USA Today) SC spending plan could cut almost 2,300 jobs (AP via Yahoo! Finance) What We’re Reading: Barbie, Steve Jobs and Carly Fiorina (New York Times) Chevron seeks UK refinery sale, to cut 2,000 jobs (Reuters via Yahoo! News) Training Displaced Workers But For What Jobs? (NPR) Chevron to shed 2,000 jobs, sell some assets (AP via Yahoo! News) Aussie Touches 7-Week High on Rates, Jobs Outlook, China Trade (Bloomberg)
Around 150 jobs will go at the Toyota plant on Deeside, Flintshire, as part of 750 posts going across the UK.
Union officials say no jobs will be lost at Airbus in Flintshire, after a bid for a £5bn deal is dropped.
Dairy company Dale Farm has said it will create 60 jobs with a £39m investment at its three sites in Northern Ireland.
The economy generated jobs at a noticeably faster pace in January, the government said Tuesday.
South Carolina agencies say planned spending cuts will eliminate nearly 2,300 jobs. House members on Tuesday were briefed on the $5 billion spending plan for the fiscal year that begins July 1.
Our daily roundup of Web gems includes a deeper look at Barbie the engineer, Carly Fiorina's tenure at Hewlett-Packard, Jonathan Schwartz's battles with Steve Jobs and Bill Gates and a pricing glitch at Amazon.com.
Chevron Corp , the second-largest U.S. oil company, put some of its downstream operations up for sale, including its Pembroke refinery in the UK, and said it would eliminate 2,000 jobs this year.
In Dayton, Ohio, Sinclair Community College has been a driving force in helping retrain the unemployed so they can find work after graduation. But high paying manufacturing jobs don't seem to be coming back, and any good job is tough to find.
Chevron Corp. said Tuesday it will cut 2,000 jobs this year and sell some overseas operations as it revamps its struggling refinery, marketing and transportation operations.
March 10 (Bloomberg) -- The Australian dollar rose to its strongest in seven weeks before a report tomorrow economists say will show employers added jobs for a sixth month, spurring expectations for an interest-rate increase in April.