Fiber Innovation Technology Expands in Johnson City, Tennessee

The team at Fiber Innovation Technology in Johnson City is dealing with a problem many businesses would like to have – how to satisfy increasing product demand – thanks to the company’s growing reputation in the specialty synthetic fibers market.

With highly versatile fiber products like “4DG,” which transports moisture, retains heat and is used in everything from athletic clothing to road underlayment – it even proved the best in a NASA study looking at prospective spacesuit materials for a Mars mission – the is on the rise.

FIT’s management team was considering growth options when they heard Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey and Tennessee Economic and Community Development Director Bill Hagerty outline Gov. Bill Haslam’s JOBS4TN program. Realizing that the economic development approach being promoted by Tennessee’s Department of Economic and Community Development (ECD) might help the company meet some of its needs, they contacted ECD Business Development Consultant Alicia Summers and the Washington County Economic Development Council’s Mitch Miller.

Miller and Summers visited Fiber Innovation Technology in October 2011, where they informed FIT’s leadership about the specific opportunities available. Within a matter of days, FIT had firmed up plans for a $1.8 million expansion at its facility in the shadow of Buffalo Mountain, and the ECD had come through with a package from state resources specifically designed to help existing businesses grow and provide jobs.

“Fiber Innovation Technology is an important part of Washington County’s business landscape, and it is great to see the company continually thriving in our community,” Summers said.

FIT’s expansion, full completion of which will depend on continued increasing demand from customers, already has added nearly 30 new jobs at the company, which now employs almost 100 people. FIT Human Resources Manager/Safety Coordinator Scott Hammitt said if positive trends continue, the company could eventually find itself needing to expand even further.

“By doing this, we have definitely enhanced our strength in the specialty synthetic fibers market,” Hammitt said.

FIT’s products wind up in some interesting places, and with the company’s emphasis on research and development, the practical applications are increasing all the time.

Take hard-top surfaces such as roads or airport tarmac, for instance. Fiber Innovation Technology researchers have discovered that 4DG, that NASA-studied, oddly shaped fiber mentioned above, can absorb and disperse moisture when deployed as underlayment in road or pavement design. Airport owners and governments that build roads where repeated freezing and thawing hasten the cracking of pavement are eagerly testing the fiber’s promise as a preventive technique.

“Mother Nature has made expensive repairs pretty much of an inevitability in these types of situations,” FIT Controller Eddie Shankle said. “This use of 4DG provides a ‘pay me now or pay me later’ alternative, with an upfront investment in our product definitely the wiser financial choice in the long run.”

That scenario is playing itself out in more and more markets as FIT’s research and development team – which in turn is part of the much larger multinational Cha Technologies Group – presses ahead with development of fibers that find their way into products ranging from baby wipes and car parts to construction and home furnishings.

The company’s Scott Hammitt said the experience with WCEDC and the state confirms to FIT’s management team that Washington County is a smart place to do business.

“We want to continue to grow in Washington County,” Hammitt said. “When your business is successful and the state recognizes that with help from its end, it makes the decision about whether to invest capital a lot easier.”

Washington County Economic Development Council staff will continue making frequent contact with the county’s existing businesses, Mitch Miller said. Their message? We support our existing businesses, we want to know how things are going, and we’re here to help in any way we can.

“The experience with Fiber Innovation Technology offers a good example of what can happen when an economic development team takes a broad-based approach to helping create jobs and investment,” Miller said. “We’ll continue to develop and maintain close relationships with our existing employers, and we’re confident good results such as FIT’s expansion will continue to occur.”