Cities Are Competing to Give Amazon the 'Mother of All Civic Giveaways' (vice.com)
Louise Matsakis, reporting for Motherboard: Amazon announced earlier this month that it was looking to build a second headquarters outside Seattle, where more than 40,000 of the company's more than 380,000 employees currently work. The tech giant is searching for a locale with at least a million people, a diverse population, and excellent schools, among other qualifications. It gave municipalities six weeks -- until October 19 -- to submit a proposal to be chosen. Local governments in more than 100 American and Canadian cities, including places like San Diego, Chicago, Dallas, and Detroit, quickly scrambled to outline why they should be home to Amazon's new corporate office, which is expected to employ up to 50,000 workers. The mayor of Washington D.C., Muriel Bowser, even made a scripted video for Amazon explaining why the capital should be picked. It featured an Echo, Amazon's smart speaker. But experts who have studied Amazon's business practices say having one of the most tax-allergic corporations in the world come to your hometown might not actually be a good thing.
(give the ol' middle finger)
They figured Denver to be the best spot https://www.nytimes.com/intera...
Sure, they'll ask for incentives, but 50000 employed people including a significant number of them being well paid makes a big difference in things like property tax, land value, etc.
We are already perfectly capable of sucking tax money from citizens and putting it into private hands.
Montreal is renowned for its cheap rents. Let's not ruin that please
What is the capital city of Hell? I'll bet they have a diverse population.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Marx talked about this in his books but all anyone ever seems to remember about him is Stalin & Mao put his name on their Pamphlets... Not saying he was right about everything, but I think this one's a given.
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Pass Stupid Tax Laws, Win stupid Prizes.
With the new tax laws specifically targeting the wealthy this was not a surprise. It's more about clueless young people 'sticking it' to the men and women with the jobs and motivation to build much-needed infrastructure. I can't imagine a better example of cutting off your hand to spite your your fingers.
http://www.latimes.com/nation/...
~ People that think they are better than anyone else for any reason are the cause of all the strife in the world.
I think this is the first step in getting out of Seattle. There is no reason to have a second headquarters - it doesn't make any sense.
You mean all a city has to do is offer a Honda to a certain number of executives and they'll win the new HQ?
...a million people, a diverse population, and excellent schools, yes Detroit has all that & then some.
But "among other qualifications" includes a good mass transit system... not even close. A proposal to pay for it went down in flames just recently.
SLOWER TRAFFIC KEEP RIGHT
Too bad Wisconsin already blew its load on attracting factory jobs that require manual labor and will never earn more than $50,000 per year. (minus the $7,000 they pay every year per job)
Why would any tech workers want to be in the environment of Washington DC, where your personal progress is based on other people's uniformed, unintellectual, non-measureable impression of you, that you have to influence by endless talking to people and convincing them based on non-refutable arguments?
It's more dehumanizing than applying for a job.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
>> mayor of Washington D.C., Muriel Bowser
The current mayor of Washington DC is "Bowser"? After Marion Barry, I don't think anyone is sure whether the leaders of the city or the voters are kidding anymore.
Given what we all know about amazon, who would want to work for them? And if you wouldn't want to work for them, why would you want to buy anything from them? They're too big already.
It's equally convenient to both coasts.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
How is this legal? Shouldn't WTO or trade agreements make this kind of government subsidy impossible these days?
Amazon won't provide housing or infrastructure, WILL clog your roads/sidewalks with shitty robots doing the work Americans can't do like delivering packages, cheat their employees out of health care pensions and other benefits traditionally associated with skilled labor, and ultimately when their profit margin adjusts to the reality of the market (down from their hype in the cloud) they'll just pick up, close up, sell off and screw that town. Count on that.
Amazon is not going to be a jobs program that revitalizes local economies, it's going to be a cancer that metastatizes and then spreads off to virgin markets to disrupt new sectors.
Of course the lure of quick growth will fool some desperate idiots in a red state somewhere. Enjoy your economic cannibalism, you deserve it.
Where in the Constitution is Congress granted the power to set state and local tax policy?
Since this is about interstate commerce, that would be Article I, Section 8, Clause 3.
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
http://splinternews.com/amazon...
Very low electricity bills ( like 4 cents per kwh), many universities, close to an almost unused international airport (Mirabel). This airport is dedicated to cargo traffic, etc...
Wisconsin GOP will find a way to spend even more money on corporate welfare -- and I think the Dems are mad they didn't get to do it.
At least these tax credits won't go for massive statium that only get used for 8 football games and a few concerts per year.
What would stop a company the size and scope of amazon from building a platform in international waters, and use that as their headquarters?
Seems like it would be the next step in corporate evolution.
That means great colleges. It will likely need to be on, or close to, the east coast. It will have to be corporate tax friendly. It will need to be easily accessible domestically and internationally - great airports. They won't want to fish in the same pond as Google, Microsoft etc. for talent - drives up their labor costs. It will need great communications infrastructure (networking, roads, power ...).
Like they need them.
Wisconsin gave a multi-Billion incentive to Foxconn to locate there. That doesn't include the pass they'll receive in environmental regulations so the vicinity can expect some local pollution. Sweet deal. For Foxconn.
What will Amazon be demanding once they select some sucker^Wcity to be their second headquarters?
CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
Pretty easy fix for businesses exploiting local tax minimums.
Have the federal government create a 33% tax on corporate profits, minus the state tax rate on corporate profits.
Move your business anywhere you like, you'll be paying the Feds or you'll be paying the Locals.
The federal government then reviews state tax rates when handing out block grants.
States who already collected their money locally don't need as much from the Feds.
Topeka renames itself to ‘Google’ in an effort to lure tech company’s fiber optic plan ... ...
By Associated Press -- March 2, 2010, 10:06 a.m.
Topeka — Topeka's mayor says the city shall temporarily be referred to as "Google, Kansas — the capital city of fiber optics," in an effort to persuade
the Internet giant to test an ultra-fast connection in the state capital.
http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2010/mar/02/topeka-renames-itself-google-effort-lure-tech-comp/
it allows to sell products through its Amazon.com web portal it could become as untrustworthy as ebay, i notice a lot of crap products on amazon the last couple of years, and it is gradually getting worse,
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
And Amazon is a crony.
But don't worry, WE pay for it.
Cronies enriched at our expense.
The vast majority of whichever city is saddled with Amazon's new campus is going to be worse off for it, as they'll be getting the shitty end of the gentrification stick. Wealthy workers don't tend to patronize average local businesses, they aren't fancy enough. They shop from high-end local businesses (this very much includes small artisan shops) or order from distant ones, worsening inequality further.
Also I predict that Amazon won't stray from the usual list of tech hotspots - NY, Austin. Boston, SF. Maayybe Toronto. Don't expect any surprises that might act to relieve this damaging concentration of tech jobs.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
"The tech giant is searching for a locale with at least a million people ..... and excellent schools...."
Yes, when I think Detroit I think excellent schools, bwahahahahaha.
are more or even the same as the employees salaries. At that point all you've really done is have your city borrow a few billion dollars and give it to a corporation. Heck, it's worse than that, since they got labor on top of that. That's exactly what's going down with Wisconson's Foxconn deal. The question is will another city/state do the same (and stick the tax payer with the bill for their business expenses, which will eventually have to be paid when the bonds come due).
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Professionals don't do spec work.
I'm guessing the hepatitis outbreak isn't helping our cause
When does this happen in the movie?
Who gives a fuck.
The thing is if you can create 50k jobs in your area, you are doing well.
50,000 people paying income tax, property tax, sales taxes.
All that money being spent needs new and expanded local businesses to spend it at.
If I owned ran a city, I would all Amazon to build a headquarters there and employ 50,000 people and pay zero property tax for their entire existence.
Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
This is what we have been reduced to.
Northern VA meets most of the requirements: large & diverse population, public transportation, proximity to 2 major airports (3 if you include BWI), good schools, large talent pool to draw upon, lots of other big companies (Mars, Nestle USA) and organizations (Consumer Electronics Association,Grocery Manufacturers Association).
The downsides: the cost of living in general, and housing in particular. Also, you can forget building a sizable facility anywhere close to DC in that part of Virginia at a reasonable cost.
There are some articles saying that College Park, Maryland is putting forth a proposal. It's cheaper to live there, the demographic is younger & there's room to build & expand a headquarters, but the school system sucks (unless your child(ren) is/are in a private or magnet school).
I fucking hate LA.
1. Having a Canadian city means if they have H1-B or other visa problems, they can work in North America in the interim. Unlike the FamilyIsEverything USA, Canada prioritizes highly educated English and French capable people for visas, so it's not a big deal. This would mean Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, Montreal and Gatwick are all prime locations.
2. Seattle itself could easily handle the growth. For example, you could just upzone Crown Hill in Ballard to be 40-100 story MFH (apartment/condo) buildings and allow commercial arterials to go 40-100 story as well, provided you fast track an E-W light rail link from Northgate (where the light rail ends in 2021) and maybe extend the monorail from Seattle Center to Crown Hill via a switch bridge. Most employees who get options won't be paying any local Seattle income tax, unless they're really stupid.
3. Whatever city other than these is included will need a high speed rail link. Not Accela, a real high speed rail like Vietnam, China, Japan, and the EU have. So anyone planning to get Amazon II will need to bash their legislature into order fast. Nobody cares what your excuses are, just what you can deliver.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Bezos hates Trump. Trump hates Bezos. So you can immediately discount Arizona, Wyoming, and Alabama. Florida is out - too many natural disasters. Same goes for Louisiana. In the Northeast the taxes are too high and land is expensive, although they have a highly educated population. Lots of tech companies in Minnesota but brutal weather and high taxes.
My guess is that it ends up in Austin. Conservative state (well, Purple State) but a liberal city and that suits Bezos' politics. Low taxes. They can poach potential employees from Dell. Relatively low cost of living. Abundant amounts of cheap land. A state government that is friendly towards business.
If they end up in Texas it will be Austin - bet on it.
Monorail! Monorail! Monorail!
How about a city with warm weather and nice beaches, like Miami or Los Angeles? That would make working for Amazon a lot more appealing.
They gave a shitload to Foxconn already and they are probably paying minimum wage. I bet Amazon's HQ is more interesting to a lot of municipalities.
Amazon has to consider the cost of employing in the local economy as well. One of those costs is obviously property and corporate taxes, another one is the State income tax burden and prevailing wage base in each location. Assuming cities and states are roughly equal in what they're offering Amazon, those states with low or no employee State income tax would seem to have an advantage in hiring as well as tempting existing Amazon workers from CA to pilot the new location.
I was actually thinking Austin. Texas has no personal income tax and it is already known as Silicon Gulch
Recent (and currently on-going) civil unrest over the legal system's failure to punish a cop for treating his badge like a hunting license may cost the St. Louis metro area the Amazon "second headquarters.
Good.
Times two.
When governments tax existing small and medium-sized businesses more to grant tax breaks to big firms to locate in (or not move out of) a state or city, it's not good for the local economy. http://duckduckgo.com/?q=the.s... The jobs "created" or "saved" are conspicuous. The jobs at smaller employers that are lost or never created in the first place are not.
That's one. And the second reason?
If those who are upset about how people react to cops misbehaving as usual get upset enough, maybe they'll do something constructive about it -- like having someone other than cops and prosecutors investigate and prosecute incidents where cops kill people.
"We investigated ourselves and found we did nothing wrong." is a bad idea even when it turns out to be true. It diminishes the credibility of the decision even when it's correct.
There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
No way this is the mother of all civic giveaways. I'm sure amazon will get a sweet deal, but sports teams literally get the government to build their facilities for them.