Apple said it plans to spend $1 billion as it builds a new
campus and engineering hub in the Research Triangle area of
North Carolina, with most of the jobs expected to focus on
machine learning, artificial intelligence, software engineering
and other technology fields. It joins a $1 billion Austin, Texas
campus announced in 2019.
The iPhone maker said it would also establish a $100 million
fund to support schools in the Raleigh-Durham area of North
Carolina and throughout the state, as well as contribute $110
million to help build infrastructure such as broadband internet,
roads, bridges and public schools in 80 North Carolina counties.
“As a North-Carolina native, I’m thrilled Apple is expanding and
creating new long-term job opportunities in the community I grew
up in," Jeff Williams, Apple’s chief operating officer, said in
a statement.
"We’re proud that this new investment will also be supporting
education and critical infrastructure projects across the
state."
Apple also said it expanded hiring targets at other U.S.
locations to hit a goal 20,000 additional jobs by 2026, setting
new goals for facilities in Colorado, Massachusetts and
Washington state.
In Apple's home state of California, the company said it will
aim to hire 5,000 people in San Diego and 3,000 people in Culver
City in the Los Angeles area.
Apple also increased a U.S. spending target to $430 billion by
2026, up from a five-year goal of $350 billion Apple set in
2018, and said it was on track to exceed.
The target includes Apple's U.S. data centers, capital
expenditures and spending to create original television content
in 20 states. It also includes spending with Apple's
U.S.-headquartered suppliers, though Apple has not said whether
it applies only to goods made in those suppliers' U.S.
facilities.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by
Stephen Coates)
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