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Small Nacogdoches plant will continue producing doorframes

Endura vice president Kevin MacDonald (third from left) receives the DETCOG forgivable loan from Nacogdoches mayor Roger Van Horn. Also shown (from left) are Nacogdoches city commissioner Mike Keller; DETCOG executive director Walter Diggles; DETCOG vice president Roy Bolden (second from right) and Nacogdoches Economic Development Corporation CEO Nancy Windham.
Deep East Texas Council of Governments
Endura vice president Kevin MacDonald (third from left) receives the DETCOG forgivable loan from Nacogdoches mayor Roger Van Horn. Also shown (from left) are Nacogdoches city commissioner Mike Keller; DETCOG executive director Walter Diggles; DETCOG vice president Roy Bolden (second from right) and Nacogdoches Economic Development Corporation CEO Nancy Windham.

A Nacogdoches plant that manufactures rot-proof doorframes will stay open for the foreseeable future.

North Carolina-based Endura Products received a $200,000 check this month from the Deep East Texas Council of Governments or DETCOG. Endura is one of a dozen companies that has benefited from DETOG’s Forgivable Loan program.

Endura vice president Kevin MacDonald (third from left) receives the DETCOG forgivable loan from Nacogdoches mayor Roger Van Horn. Also shown (from left) are Nacogdoches city commissioner Mike Keller; DETCOG executive director Walter Diggles; DETCOG vice president Roy Bolden (second from right) and Nacogdoches Economic Development Corporation CEO Nancy Windham.
Credit Deep East Texas Council of Governments
Endura vice president Kevin MacDonald (third from left) receives the DETCOG forgivable loan from Nacogdoches mayor Roger Van Horn. Also shown (from left) are Nacogdoches city commissioner Mike Keller; DETCOG executive director Walter Diggles; DETCOG vice president Roy Bolden (second from right) and Nacogdoches Economic Development Corporation CEO Nancy Windham.

DETOG’s executive director Walter Diggles says the funding comes from a $5 million federal economic revitalization program helping companies retain and create jobs. If Endura keeps its 35 employees in Nacogdoches for two years, according to Diggles, the forgivable loan becomes a grant.

“We don’t have any loans that have defaulted on the agreement to create or retain these jobs, and that’s really what makes it viable for us,” Diggles said.

Endura Products took over the plant a decade ago, according to its vice president of operations Kevin MacDonald. Then came the housing collapse and a disruption in its South American wood supply that caused the company to make a hard choice. MacDonald says Nacogdoches economic developers were eager to work with him to keep the plant open and valuable employees factored into that decision.

“That’s an experienced workforce, a hardworking workforce, and they have a good team down there. Secondly, we value that rot-proof doorframe product. We were struggling and considering closing that facility,” MacDonald said.

Endura is now sourcing its wood from North Carolina and Virginia instead of Chile, and shipping it to Nacogdoches. It’s an added expense, but MacDonald says the loan is helping out.

Diggles says the program’s funding will be exhausted by the end of the year. To date, the funding has retained or created hundreds of jobs in the 12 county East Texas region.

Copyright 2021 Red River Radio. To see more, visit Red River Radio.

Chuck Smith
Chuck Smith brings more than 30 years' experience to Red River Radio having started out as a radio news reporter and moving into television journalism as a newsmagazine producer / host, talk-show moderator, programming director and managing producer and news director / anchor for commercial, public broadcasting and educational television. He has more recently worked in advertising, marketing and public relations as a writer, video producer and media consultant. In pursuit of higher learning, Chuck studied Mass Communications at Southern Arkansas University in Magnolia and motion picture / television production at the University of California at Los Angeles. He has also taught writing for television at York Technical College in Rock Hill, South Carolina and video / film production at Centenary College of Louisiana, Shreveport.

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