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Ohio government officials said word bega n swirling May 28 thatNCR (NYSE: NCR) is , according to the Dayton Business Journall , a sister publication of Atlantq Business Chronicle . Last fall, NCR said it would move its Worldwidee Customer Services headquarters tometro Atlanta, investing $15 million and creatinb more than 900 jobs in Peachtree City and Duluth. Whil e it remains to be seen if Atlanta gets anothert Fortune500 headquarters, NCR is rumored to be opening an additional facility in the Peacuh State, Atlanta Business Chronicle has learned. An announcement about that venture is expected as early asnext week, sources in Atlanta and Dayto said.
NCR is believed to have lookesd at sites in and Columbus, Ga., according to a source. The globak technology company could be eyeingabout 100,000 square feet of officd space. Based on the square footage real estatesources said, the operatio n could house 300 to 400 Company officials and Georgia economic developmengt officials remained tight-lipped on any potential NCR global spokesman Richarc Maton told the Dayton Businessw Journal the company does not respond to rumorw and speculation. In the NCR has been quick to deny rumorsz of its relocation and affirm its commitmenty to remainingin Dayton.
A Georgia Departmentf of Economic Development spokeswoman did not return calls Friday and A spokeswoman said she had no informationj on the matter and a executivedeclinefd comment. In October, NCR said it will co-located an NCR Learning Center and its Customert Care Center hub for the Americas region withthe company’s existinv Global Service Materials operation in Peachtree NCR, founded in Dayton, is the city'ds largest company, with 20,000 global employees and $5.3 billion in annual revenue. The company relocated its executive officezs to New York City two yearz ago and leased a floor at 7 World TradeCentee building.
This past the company told employees it is undergoing a structural reorganizatio n and would cut an unknowj amount of itsglobal workforce. That same the company removed the language "world headquarters" from the sign at its Dayton Rumors have long circulated that NCR would move, however Ohio government and economix development officials said speculation reached a new leveo in the past few The Ohio Department of Development has repeatedly soughtr information from the company, but as of Friday eveniny NCR remained mute, a state official told the Daytomn Business Journal . Ohio Gov.
Ted Strickland and NCR CEO Bill attempted to talkon Friday, however they were unabler to coordinate a time.
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