A Final Farewell: Remington CEO Cites ‘Legislative Environment’ in New York as Company Moves to Georgia

Remington is leaving New York, and CEO Ken D’Arcy noted that the direction legislation took in the Empire State was a cause for concern.

The nation’s oldest gun-maker is consolidating operations in Georgia and recently announced plans to shutter the Ilion factory in early March.

This from breitbart.com.

A view of the Remington Arms compound in the middle of Ilion, N.Y., Thursday, Feb. 1, 2024. The nation’s oldest gun-maker is consolidating operations in Georgia and recently announced plans to shutter the Ilion factory in early March. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

The Remington Arms compound in the middle of Ilion, NY, Feb. 1, 2024.

300 workers will lose their jobs. The village will lose the center of its civic life.

The Associated Press (AP) noted:

D’Arcy used a news release to indicate that New York’s “legislative environment” is concerning to the firearm industry as a whole.

The pending closure of Remington’s Ilion, New York, plant—launched in 1828—marks the end of generations of New Yorkers working for the American gun maker.

Jim Conover began working at the Ilion plant in 1964 and continued to work for Remington for four decades. He commented on the pending closure, having said:

 When Remington leaves, it’s not going to be like a facility leaving, it’s going to be like part of your family has moved off.

On December 1, 2023, Breitbart News reported that Remington was closing the Ilion plant and the anticipated date of closure is early March 2024.

News Channel 2 noted that New York State Sen. Joseph Griffo (R), Assemblyman Brian Miller (R), and Assemblyman Robert Smullen (R) released a joint statement in response to the announced closure. The statement said:

In addition to all the regulations and taxes in New York, the state has so much gun control that Mike Bloomberg-affiliated Everytown for Gun Safety ranks it the No. 2 state in the Union for gun control laws.

Those gun controls include an “assault weapons” ban, a “high-capacity” magazine ban, universal background checks, a red flag law, gun storage requirements, “ghost gun” regulations, a microstamping requirement for new handguns, a ban on being armed on college or on K-12 campuses for self-defense or classroom defense, and stringent open carry regulations.

Final thought: New York’s loss is Georgia’s gain. Best wishes, Georgia.