CAMAS, Wash. — The paper mill in the southwest Washington city of Camas is cutting 243 jobs, beginning May 1.

The Columbian newspaper reports that Georgia-Pacific announced plans for the layoffs in November, but a new notice from the state Employment Security Department makes clear the timing and number of the cuts.

The Atlanta-based company is shutting down operations at the mill that make paper for printer, copiers and the like. Its paper towel operations will remain intact.

The layoffs hit more than half the mill's 400 workers, in an industry that pays an average of $77,588 in Clark County.

The mill opened in 1885 and employed about 2,400 workers in the 1980s.

In November, Georgia-Pacific, a subsidiary of Koch Industries, tied the cuts to diminished demand for office paper.

In October 2017, West Linn Paper Co. shuttered its 128-year-old mill on the Willamette River, eliminating roughly 250 jobs.

-- The Associated Press