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PepsiCo Foods U.S. confirmed that it a Frito-Lay plant in Rancho Cucamonga will be shutting down manufacturing operations.
More than five decades of snack food production came to an end when Frito-Lay closed manufacturing operations at its Rancho Cucamonga facility, eliminating hundreds of jobs in the process.
Texas-based Frito-Lay has stopped production at the manufacturing plant that is said to be the birth place of the mega-popular (especially in San Antonio) Flamin' Hot Cheetos. The California plant has ...
Employees at the 55-year-old facility were notified Monday that they had made the plant’s last Cheetos, Tostitos, Doritos and ...
The plant closure in California is the latest from the PepsiCo subsidiary. In February, Frito-Lay said it would close a New York plant making PopCorners , which employed 287 people.
Earlier this year, the company announced the closure of a Frito-Lay plant in Liberty, N.Y., laying off 287 workers, and cut 56 jobs at a warehouse in Maryland.
Frito-Lay is ending manufacturing operations at its Rancho Cucamonga plant after 55 years, resulting in potentially hundreds of job eliminations, though warehouse, distribution, fleet, and ...
The Frito-Lay manufacturing facility that gave birth to Flamin’ Hot Cheetos nearly 35 years ago in Rancho Cucamonga is no longer churning out crunchy snacks. Employees at the 55-year-old ...
The Rancho Cucamonga plant opened in 1970. Frito-Lay, which merged with Pepsi-Cola in 1965, introduced its Flamin’ Hot Cheetos in 1991.
Earlier this year, the company announced the closure of a Frito-Lay plant in Liberty, N.Y., laying off 287 workers, and cut 56 jobs at a warehouse in Maryland.