GE’s Unplugging Leaves Many Unsettled in Connecticut Town

It’s not just the loss of loyal customers that worries jeweler Howard Diamond, or the extra tax burden that businesses like his may have to carry as General Electric pulls the plug on Fairfield. As he approaches retirement and thinks about selling his home in town, he also fears an exodus of GE employees driving down real estate values.
GE’s Unplugging Leaves Many Unsettled in Connecticut Town
The sun shines on shops along Post Road in Fairfield, Conn., on Jan. 14, 2016. General Electric said Wednesday it will begin relocating its global headquarters from its suburban campus in Fairfield to Boston in the summer, and complete the move by 2018. General Electric’s relocation has many in Fairfield fretting over the loss of tax revenue, charitable spending, and the prestige that comes with being home to a $130 billion company. AP Photo/Michael Melia
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FAIRFIELD, Conn.—It’s not just the loss of loyal customers that worries jeweler Howard Diamond, or the extra tax burden that businesses like his may have to carry as General Electric pulls the plug on Fairfield. As he approaches retirement and thinks about selling his home in town, he also fears an exodus of GE employees driving down real estate values.

“You feel badly for yourself, but you feel badly for everybody else, too,” said Diamond, an owner of Fairfield Center Jewelers.

You feel badly for yourself, but you feel badly for everybody else, too.
Howard Diamond, owner, Fairfield Center Jewelers