Here's what some cities are offering Amazon to get Amazon's second headquarters

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This City Hall, brought to you by Amazon


This City Hall, brought to you by Amazon
Originally published November 24, 2017 at 7:50 pm Updated November 24, 2017 at 8:35 pm
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A chalk depiction of the 238 proposals Amazon received for its proposed 50,000-employee HQ2. Cities and states are going to great lengths to get a piece of that high-tech glory. (Jordan Stead/Amazon)
A review of some of the bids to woo Amazon’s HQ2 to other cities and states shows it’s not all about the money. In some cases democracy itself is a bargaining chip.

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By
Danny Westneat
Seattle Times staff columnist

There’s rising worry that corporations are taking over America. But after reviewing a slew of the bids by cities and states wooing Amazon’s massive second headquarters, I don’t think “takeover” quite captures what’s going on.

More like “surrender.”

Last month Amazon announced it got 238 offers for its new, proposed 50,000-employee HQ2. I set out to see what’s in them, but only about 30 have been released so far under public-record acts.

Those 30, though, amply demonstrate our capitulation to corporate influence in politics. There’s a new wave, in which some City Halls seem willing to go beyond just throwing money at Amazon. They’re turning over the keys to the democracy.

Coming from the home of the largest corporate tax-break package in U.S. history, which our state gave to Boeing, I figured I was well acquainted with the dark arts of economic-incentive deals.

But still I was surprised to see the lengths to which some cities and states will go to get a piece of that high-tech glory.

Example: Chicago has offered to let Amazon pocket $1.32 billion in income taxes paid by its own workers. This is truly perverse. Called a personal income-tax diversion, the workers must still pay the full taxes, but instead of the state getting the money to use for schools, roads or whatever, Amazon would get to keep it all instead.

“The result is that workers are, in effect, paying taxes to their boss,” says a report on the practice from Good Jobs First, a think tank critical of many corporate subsidies.

Most of the HQ2 bids had more traditional sweeteners. Such as Chula Vista, California, which offered to give Amazon 85 acres of land for free (value: $100 million) and to excuse any property taxes on HQ2 for 30 years ($300 million). New Jersey remains the dollar king of the subsidy sweepstakes, having offered Amazon $7 billion to build in Newark.

But more of a bellwether to me are proposals that effectively would put Amazon inside the government.

Some are small. Boston has offered to set up an “Amazon Task Force” of city employees working on the company’s behalf. These would include a workforce coordinator, to help with Amazon’s employment needs, as well as a community- relations official to smooth over Amazon conflicts throughout Boston. (Surely Amazon can handle these things itself?)

But the most far-reaching offer is from Fresno, California. That city of half a million isn’t offering any tax breaks. Instead it has a novel plan to give Amazon special authority over how the company’s taxes are spent.

Fresno promises to funnel 85 percent of all taxes and fees generated by Amazon into a special fund. That money would be overseen by a board, half made up of Amazon officers, half from the city. They’re supposed to spend the money on housing, roads and parks in and around Amazon.

The proposal shows a park with a sign: “This park brought to you by Amazon,” with the company’s smiling arrow corporate logo.

“The community fund projects would give Amazon credit for the funding of each project,” the proposal says. “The potential negative impacts from a project would be turned into positives, giving Amazon credit for mitigating it.”

Is it even legal to give a company direct sway over civic spending like that?

When asked about it, Fresno’s economic-development director threw the public interest under the bus.

“Rather than the money disappearing into a civic black hole, Amazon would have a say on where it will go,” he told the Los Angeles Times. “Not for the fire department on the fringe of town, but to enhance their own investment in Fresno.”

You poor fools out on the fringe of town. All this time you’ve been paying your taxes, thinking it was for the broader public good. Suckers.

Seriously, we’ve got Congress slashing corporate taxes, business cash overwhelming elections and the Federal Communications Commission poised to turn control of the internet over to a few private companies. Now a single company is viewed as such a shiny prize that some seem ready to wave the white flag on the whole “for the people, by the people” experiment.

It feels like a dicey moment for the “civic black hole.“ Also known as democracy.
 

BeeCityRoller

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Don't you live in Charlotte? I don't want them here because all of the transplants, along with financial incentives we can't afford, would skyrocket the Cost of Living past ATL to near DMV/MIA levels. The roads and transit system isn't ready for that massive growth. Hopefully the lingering smell of HB2 keeps them moving somewhere else. My guess is ATL or Baltimore where they can still pay mediocre wages compared to the upper side of the Mason-Dixon.
 

Obreh Winfrey

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I doubt the leadership of many of these cities understands how HQ2 will impact them. I wouldn't doubt that 80% or more of the workforce will be pulling in $70k or more. More than likely the workforce will have salaries matching or being l beating that of the legislators. Rents will rise, COL will rise, non-Amazonians will be pushed out. It's going to create another Bay Area economic microcosm because other tech companies will probably exploit the city for similar treatment. It may not create another Silicon Valley but it'll be close. I sort of hope they choose a location that already has a high COL so that not as many average people are negatively affected.

If they place it in Chula Vista, though, I might have to make some moves :patrice:.
 

jerniebert

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Fresno still in the running. If we can get Amazon that would make my investment in Full Circle Brewing even better. :blessed:
 
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Larry Lambo

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Don't you live in Charlotte? I don't want them here because all of the transplants, along with financial incentives we can't afford, would skyrocket the Cost of Living past ATL to near DMV/MIA levels. The roads and transit system isn't ready for that massive growth. Hopefully the lingering smell of HB2 keeps them moving somewhere else. My guess is ATL or Baltimore where they can still pay mediocre wages compared to the upper side of the Mason-Dixon.

I may have to agree. I love to see growth in the city, but do we have the infrastructure to handle something this big.
 

Barbados Slim

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Example: Chicago has offered to let Amazon pocket $1.32 billion in income taxes paid by its own workers. This is truly perverse. Called a personal income-tax diversion, the workers must still pay the full taxes, but instead of the state getting the money to use for schools, roads or whatever, Amazon would get to keep it all instead.

“The result is that workers are, in effect, paying taxes to their boss,”

:hhh: Dafuq kind of mayor/government gonna allow some shyt like that...!?
 

MrPentatonic

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All this originating from a guy that wanted to sell books on the internet. Absurd.

I feel that these guys always had a bigger plan than how they start out, their strategic movements and industry foresight is chess-master esque.
 
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