Cingular Wireless expects to cut 6,800 jobs post merger
By Todd R. Weiss
,
Computerworld
, 11/24/2004
- Share/Email
- Tweet This
- Print
With its acquisition of AT&T Wireless complete, Cingular Wireless is preparing to lay off about 10% of its 68,000 workers
over a 12 to 18-month period starting next year.
That estimate was made public for the first time Tuesday by Cingular CEO Stan Sigman in an interview with The Associated Press.
Clay Owen, a Cingular spokesman at the company’s Atlanta headquarters, Wednesday confirmed that the cuts will pare about 6,800
workers from across the company. No specifics are yet available about which jobs will be affected, he said, but departments
within the company have completed staffing evaluations, which are being reviewed.
“We said all along ... that there would be cuts from this merger,” Owen said.
But what had not been disclosed until Tuesday was the estimated number of workers affected. “We haven’t gotten the hard-and-fast
numbers yet,” he said.
The union of Cingular and AT&T was announced in February, with Cingular buying AT&T Wireless for about $41 billion, or $15 per share. The deal required approval from AT&T Wireless shareholders and federal regulatory authorities.
Cingular was formed in 2000 and is jointly owned by SBC and BellSouth. Before the merger, the company had more than 24 million
subscribers and in 2003 earned revenues of approximately $15.5 billion.
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.
Comment