U.S. Steel to End Slab Processing at Granite City

Granite City, Illinois, September 11, 2025

News Summary

U.S. Steel announced it will cease slab processing at its Granite City facility by November 2025, affecting around 800 jobs. Employees will remain on-site without layoffs or pay cuts, maintaining the facility for potential future operations. This decision follows a significant acquisition by Nippon Steel and a related national security agreement which ensures job protections until 2027. The company plans to focus more on its Pennsylvania and Indiana plants while exploring future investments in Illinois.

U.S. Steel to stop slab processing at Granite City; jobs protected through 2027

U.S. Steel will stop processing steel slabs at its Granite City Works in Illinois, a move expected to be completed by November 2025. Company leaders say about 800 workers at the plant will not face layoffs or pay cuts tied to this decision and will remain on site to keep the facility ready in case operations resume.

Key details first

The decision follows the recent finalization of a nearly $15 billion buyout involving Nippon Steel and the U.S. government-level review tied to that deal. Under a national security agreement connected to that process, job protections at the Granite City facility are in place through 2027. U.S. Steel says it will shift greater focus to its Mon Valley Works in Pennsylvania and Gary Works in Indiana instead of continuing slab processing at Granite City.

What will happen on the ground

Plant staff will move from slab production duties to maintaining the site and equipment. The company describes this work as keeping the plant operational and ready to restart if future conditions justify returning to production. The United Steelworkers union has told members that the company is preparing a severance package as part of the transition, but has reiterated that no layoffs will occur under the current plan.

Why this matters

Granite City Works has not produced raw steel since 2023, when its last operating blast furnace was idled. The other blast furnace had been taken offline in 2019. Even without raw steelmaking, the plant has continued to process steel slabs used in construction, container, pipe, and automotive manufacturing. When the plant ran at full blast in earlier years, it employed roughly 2,000 workers, so the reduced hands-on workforce and the new maintenance role mark a significant shift in local employment and operations.

Union and political context

The United Steelworkers union opposed the Nippon Steel acquisition of U.S. Steel at the national level, though some local union chapters had been more supportive. The union’s local district director in Illinois is waiting for formal notification from U.S. Steel about specific details for Granite City. A local congresswoman has expressed concern about how the decision could affect jobs and attributes the change in part to policies from the current administration.

Deal conditions and oversight

The Nippon Steel acquisition moved through heightened scrutiny over national security and competition issues. As part of the oversight, U.S. Steel was placed under a provision sometimes called a golden share, which gives the federal government a voice on certain decisions about domestic steel output and competitive behavior. The broader agreement between Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel included promises for continued investment in U.S. Steel facilities across the country.

Looking ahead

With slab processing slated to end in late 2025, the next two years will be a period of maintenance, planning, and potential retooling. The protected workforce is expected to handle preservation and upkeep tasks. If market conditions or strategic decisions change, maintaining the plant in a ready state could make it easier to resume slab processing later on.

What is not yet settled

The company is developing a severance package for some employees, though the union has stressed there will be no immediate layoffs tied to the announcement. The timing and specifics of any long-term workforce changes beyond 2027 remain unclear, pending future business decisions, regulatory steps, or changes in ownership strategy.


Frequently Asked Questions

When will Granite City stop processing steel slabs?

The company expects slab processing to end in November 2025.

Will workers lose their jobs immediately?

No. About 800 workers will remain employed at the plant with no pay cuts or layoffs under the current plan. Jobs are protected through 2027 under a national security agreement.

What will workers do once slab processing ends?

Workers will maintain the facility and equipment to keep the plant in a state where it could be restarted if needed.

Why did U.S. Steel decide to stop slab processing at Granite City?

The move comes after a major ownership transaction and strategic shifts that prioritize other U.S. Steel operations. The plant has also not produced raw steel since 2023, and its blast furnaces were idled earlier.

Will the company continue to invest in Granite City?

The acquisition agreement included guarantees for ongoing investment in U.S. Steel facilities, but specific future investments for Granite City have not been detailed.

Are there any planned layoffs after 2027?

Job protections extend through 2027. What happens after that will depend on future company decisions, market conditions, and any additional agreements or regulatory actions.

Key facts at a glance

Feature Detail
Planned end of slab processing November 2025
Workers kept on site About 800 (no layoffs or pay cuts through 2027)
Job protection period Through 2027 under a national security agreement
Other focus plants Mon Valley Works (PA) and Gary Works (IN)
Blast furnace status Last furnace idled in 2023; other idled in 2019
Industries served Construction, container, pipe, automotive
Ownership change Nippon Steel acquisition finalized recently
Severance package Being developed by the company; no immediate layoffs
Previous full-capacity workforce About 2,000 workers

Deeper Dive: News & Info About This Topic

Construction IL Resources

Additional Resources

Author: RISadlog

RISadlog

Recent Posts

University of Illinois–Chicago Launches Major HVAC Upgrade

Chicago, Illinois, September 11, 2025 News Summary The University of Illinois–Chicago has initiated a $30 million…

Gurnee Approves 40-Unit Workforce Housing Project

Gurnee, Illinois, September 11, 2025 News Summary The Gurnee Village Board has approved Liberty Point Residences,…

Construction on Illinois Route 26 Begins Soon

Ogle County, Illinois, September 11, 2025 News Summary A $5.3 million resurfacing project on Illinois Route…

Southwestern Illinois College Approves $62 Million Bond for Campus Upgrades

Southwestern Illinois, September 11, 2025 News Summary The Southwestern Illinois College Board of Trustees has approved…

Tribeca condo project gets $320M loan as stalled towers and luxury resale linger

, September 11, 2025 News Summary A developer secured a $320 million construction loan to build…

South Tyrol approves funding and plans for Bolzano–Jenesien cable car

Bolzano, South Tyrol, Italy, September 11, 2025 News Summary South Tyrol's provincial government has approved updated…