Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and the Lehigh Valley used to depend on Big Steel for prosperity. But that industry's departure hasn't dealt the area, or its manufacturing, a knock-out blow.
Joyce Wunderler, of Bathl, Pennsylvania, scoops up new crayons as they roll off the conveyer belt at the Binney & Smith Crayola Crayon factory in Easton, Pennsylvania, Wednesday, August 6, 2003. Photographer: Mike Mergen/ Bloomberg News.OraSure Technologies in particular has been part of the area’s changes. The company was founded as SolarCare Incorporated in 1987, eight years before Bethlehem Steel closed its iconic flagship plant.
Tang agreed. “The area is extremely strong in education and medicine,” he said. “We’ve got Lehigh University, which provides great support for our technical needs. And we’ve got two great healthcare systems, St. Luke’s and Lehigh Valley Health Network.” “We’ve had an explosion of industrial growth the past five years,” said Cunningham. “In 2017 we went over $40 billion for our local GDP for the first time – the GDP is higher today than when we had steel. Manufacturing is now third largest for numbers of jobs, and second largest for output for Lehigh Valley. We’ve got 680 different manufacturers across two counties.”
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