[Federal Register: October 3, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 191)]
[Notices]               
[Page 56387-56388]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr03oc07-92]                         

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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Employment and Training Administration

[TA-W-61,601]

 
Intel Corporation, Fab 23, Colorado Springs, Colorado; Notice of 
Negative Determination on Reconsideration

    On August 22, 2007, the Department issued an Affirmative 
Determination Regarding Application for Reconsideration applicable to 
workers and former workers of Intel Corporation, Fab 23, Colorado 
Springs, Colorado (the subject firm). The Department's Notice of 
affirmative determination was published in the Federal Register on 
August 29, 2007 (72 FR 49736). The subject workers produce silicon 
wafers.
    The negative determination was based on the Department's findings 
that, during the relevant period, the subject firm's sales and 
production of silicon wafers increased, and the subject firm did not 
import or shift production of silicon wafers abroad. The Department's 
Notice of negative determination regarding the subject workers' 
eligibility to apply for Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) and 
Alternative Trade Adjustment Assistance (ATAA) was issued on June 15, 
2007, and published in the Federal Register on June 28, 2007 (72 FR 
35517).
    The request for reconsideration makes three allegations.
    First, the petitioner alleges that the Department misidentified the 
article produced at the subject firm (``Intel Fab23 does NOT 
manufacture Silicon Wafers, FAB23 manufactures electronic circuits 
called dies on a silicon wafer. These dies are cut from the wafer and 
then packaged. At this time, the packaged dies are called `chips' and 
sold. It should be noted, the manufactured wafer can be sold and the 
`test and assembly' of the chip can take place elsewhere. There are 
three steps here, a) INTEL buys the bare silicon wafer from a supplier, 
b) Fab23 then manufactures the electronic circuit on the wafer called a 
die and c) then die is tested and assembly.'') A corollary to this 
allegation is that the Department should have conducted a TAA 
investigation with a focus on chips instead of wafers.
    Second, the petitioner alleges that the subject workers are 
eligible to apply for TAA due to a shift of production to Taiwan. The 
petitioner states that, in 2006, Intel Corporation (Intel) sold the 
``Hermon'' line of chips to another company and that the subject firm 
agreed to produce ``Hermon'' chips for the buyer until the buyer's 
Taiwan facility could produce the ``Hermon'' chips. The petition 
asserts that because the subject firm is an ``Agent Manufacturer'' of 
the buyer, the buyer's decision to use Taiwanese chips should be 
construed as a shift of production from the subject firm to Taiwan.
    Third, the petitioner alleges that the subject workers are eligible 
to apply for TAA as secondary workers. The petitioner stated, in part, 
that ``Manufacturing Technicians of INTEL Fab 23 are likely secondary/
down stream Employees'' and that eligible secondary workers ``include 
workers employed by supplier firms, downstream producers, and firms 
that provide contract services who are separated or threatened with 
separation if their separation is their separation is due to a loss of 
business with a firm where workers have been certified as eligible to 
apply for trade adjustment assistance.''
    In order to determine whether the initial investigation focused on 
the wrong article, the Department carefully reviewed previously-
submitted information, all the information provided in the request for 
reconsideration, new information provided by the subject firm, and 
information available in the public domain (such as the Internet).
    The chip production process consists of three basic steps: first, 
prepare (purify and polish) a raw silicon wafer; second, process the 
wafer (add and expose layers of chemicals and circuitry onto the wafer) 
until engineered patterns of electrical passages (also called 
integrated circuits or chips) in the desired quantity are created; 
third, cut the circuit-laden wafer into individual dies and packaged 
(also called unit packaging).
    Steps one and two are known as wafer fabrication. After wafer 
fabrication is complete, a quality control measure called a wafer sort 
may take place. Each wafer may carry hundreds or thousands of (usually) 
identical circuits, depending on the size of the circuitry and the 
diameter of the wafer.
    According to the request for reconsideration, the article that 
exists at the end of step two is a manufactured wafer. According to the 
subject firm, the article that exists at the end of step two is a 
fabricated wafer.
    At step three (also known as unit packaging), the fabricated wafer 
is cut into dies and processed into packaged chips (also called 
fabricated chips). After the wafer is cut into dies, each chip-bearing 
die is mounted on a small printed circuit board which will allow it to 
connect with other devices through solder ball connections. The chip/
circuit-board unit is then coated with

[[Page 56388]]

epoxy plastic, leaving only the solder balls exposed. While the final 
package (also called a finished semiconductor chip) can be sold ``as 
is,'' it is usually connected to other circuit boards so it can be 
connected to a wide variety of electronic devices (such as cell phones 
and personal digital assistants).
    According to subject firm, the subject facility was engaged in only 
steps one and two, and step three took place outside the United States. 
According to the request for reconsideration, ``dies are cut from the 
wafer and then packaged * * * It should be noted, the manufactured 
wafer can be sold and the `test and assembly' of the chip can take 
place elsewhere.''
    Because the reconsideration investigation revealed that only wafer 
fabrication took place at the subject firm, the Department determines 
that the subject firm produced silicon wafers and that the focus of the 
initial TAA investigation was proper.
    Under section 113 of the Trade Adjustment Assistance Reform Act of 
2002, workers may be eligible to apply for TAA if they were laid-off if 
their company shifted production abroad to a country that is either a 
party to a free trade agreement with the United States or named as a 
beneficiary under the Andean Trade Preferences Act, the African Growth 
and Opportunity Act or the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act.
    Because Taiwan is not a country that is a party to a free trade 
agreement with the United States or named as a beneficiary under any of 
the aforementioned acts, the subject workers cannot be certified for 
TAA based on a shift of production abroad. Further, the subject workers 
cannot be certified as eligible to apply for TAA because the articles 
that are being imported following the shift of production to Taiwan are 
not like or directly competitive with the silicon wafers produced at 
the subject firm.
    In order to make an affirmative determination that the subject 
workers qualify as secondary workers, the following group eligibility 
requirements under section 222(b) must be met:
    (1) A significant number or proportion of the workers in the 
workers' firm or an appropriate subdivision of the firm have become 
totally or partially separated, or are threatened to become totally or 
partially separated; and
    (2) The workers' firm (or subdivision) is a supplier or downstream 
producer to a firm (or subdivision) that employed a group of workers 
who received a certification of eligibility to apply for trade 
adjustment assistance benefits and such supply or production is related 
to the article that was the basis for such certification; and
    (3) either--
    (A) The workers' firm is a supplier and the component parts it 
supplied for the firm (or subdivision) described in paragraph (2) 
accounted for at least 20 percent of the production or sales of the 
workers' firm; or
    (B) a loss of business by the workers' firm with the firm (or 
subdivision) described in paragraph (2) contributed importantly to the 
workers' separation or threat of separation.
    The subject workers are not considered secondary workers because 
the subject firm neither supplied a component part to the buyer nor 
finished or assembled a final product for the buyer. Further, the buyer 
of the ``Hermon'' line of chips is not a company that employs a group 
of workers who received a certification of eligibility to apply for TAA 
benefits.
    In order for the Department to issue a certification of eligibility 
to apply for ATAA, the subject worker group must be certified eligible 
to apply for TAA. Since the subject workers are denied eligibility to 
apply for TAA, the workers cannot be certified eligible for ATAA.

Conclusion

    After careful reconsideration, I affirm the original notice of 
negative determination of eligibility to apply for worker adjustment 
assistance for workers and former workers of Intel Corporation, Fab 23, 
Colorado Springs, Colorado.

    Signed at Washington, DC, this 26th day of September 2007
Elliott S. Kushner,
Certifying Officer, Division of Trade Adjustment Assistance.
 [FR Doc. E7-19481 Filed 10-2-07; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 4510-FN-P