- Senate Democrats at Odds Over Health Care Bill
- What if a Recovery Is All in Your Head?
- Thanksgiving Week Stuffed With Economic News
- A Taxpayer's Must Read: The Fed Waltz With AIG
- Newspaper Circulation May Be Worse Than it Looks
- Investors to Goldman: Be Less Greedy
- Scientist: Leak of Climate E-mails Appalling
- 10 Tips to Get Out of Debt
- 'New Moon' Takes Record $72.7M Box Office Bite
- How Stock Investors Can Play Holiday Travel
- Time Lapse World Series Is A Great Play
- Hirschhorn: Greed...or Fear
- My Top 10 Tech Toys for the Holidays
- iPhone a Better Gaming Platform Than Android?
- May Day For Dendreon
- 100% Mortgage Financing From USDA
- Holiday Tipping: Who And How Much
- Deep Discounts Should Make It a Very Tech-y Holiday
- Radiation prompts Three Mile Island probe
- Promoters have faith in ‘holy hip-hop’
- Real estate agents see return of foreign buyers
- Newspaper circulation may be worse than it looks
- Accounting rule helps boost some newspapers
- Holidays will again test NYC air travel bottleneck
- RI slow to spend millions in stimulus funding
- Rising unemployment taxes could hinder hiring
- NY saves $3.1 million in energy efficiency program
Hitachi to expand Kentucky manufacturing plant
FRANKFORT, Ky. - Hitachi Automotive Products plans to expand its Harrodsburg, Ky., manufacturing plant and add more than 100 new jobs "in the near future."
The plant that opened in 1986 already employs more than 600 people.
Gov. Steve Beshear said Tuesday that the expansion would add production lines for high pressure fuel pumps.
The Kentucky Economic Development Finance Authority has given preliminary approval of nearly $2.9 million in tax incentives for Hitachi to expand the plant.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
- Technology can make or break a fortune in the world of alternative energy.
- Many people are facing the holidays with substantially smaller incomes. Here’s how some are adapting.
- Jim Cramer is a proponent of stocks that pay healthy dividends, and here are his top five dividend plays.
- From salt, to lip balm to envelopes, it turns out that bacon flavoring can sell almost anything.
- The homebuyer's tax credit jacked sales for a while, but 2010 is looking weak. Now what?
- CNBC’s technology reporter Jim Goldman guides you through the best gadgets to buy this holiday season.









