Four-and-half billion dollars in direct cash payments from taxpayers. Special court privileges. Kicking homeowners out of their houses using eminent domain. Shifting large amounts of cash away from the public sector. Given the numerous ways in which Wisconsin politicians convinced electronics manufacturing giant Foxconn to build its first plant in the Badger State, you’d probably assume the payoff would be millions of jobs for local workers and a fantastical return on investment in the near-term. But you would think wrong! Instead, Donald Trump’s “incredible” deal has turned out to be one of his biggest scams yet. And, apparently, the hits just keep coming:

Foxconn Technology Group is considering bringing in personnel from China to help staff a large facility under construction in southern Wisconsin as it struggles to find engineers and other workers in one of the tightest labor markets in the U.S. . . . Foxconn Chairman Terry Gou is looking to company engineers in China to transfer, according to people familiar with the matter.

A tight labor market is making recruiting a challenge. Unemployment in the state reached a record low earlier this year. At 3 percent in September, Wisconsin’s jobless rate is well below the national average, which hit 3.7 percent that month—itself a 49-year low.

A tight labor market in which the economy is already minting roughly 200,000 jobs a month might’ve been one of the many reasons that throwing billions of dollars at a foreign company in the hopes of an investment maybe panning out by 2042 at the earliest wasn’t such a great idea in the first place. But despite Foxconn’s reported attempts to bring Chinese workers to Wisconsin, thus far said workers have taken a pass.

Some engineers have expressed reluctance to relocate to Wisconsin, which is less well-known to Chinese workers than U.S. tech hubs in California or New York.

One engineer who declined to give his name said he wouldn’t want to move to a place he worried could be as cold as Harbin, a northern Chinese city known as “Ice City.”

In a statement, Foxconn told The Wall Street Journal its “Wisconsin first commitment remains unchanged,” and, in another statement, that it is still committed to hiring 13,000 employees, the majority of which “will work on high-value production and engineering assignments and in the research and development field.” (Part of the initial pitch to Wisconsinites was, in fact, that the majority of the jobs would be of the middle-class manufacturing variety.)