Lethbridge Herald

Amazon bid divides Halifax

HALIFAX’S ‘DARK HORSE’ BID FOR NEW AMAZON HEADQUARTE­RS SPARKS SOUL SEARCHING

- Brett Bundale THE CANADIAN PRESS — HALIFAX

It started out largely as a cheerleadi­ng exercise, a way of touting Halifax’s best-kept secrets to show the world we’re open for business. But Halifax’s bid to woo Amazon’s new corporate headquarte­rs has morphed into something akin to a municipal mid-life crisis, as the city delves into a round of soul searching on what it really wants out of life.

Amazon, the e-commerce and cloud computing giant, is on the hunt for a location for a second campus in North America, with plans to spend $5 billion and create 50,000 jobs.

Halifax’s decision to enter the competitio­n has set off a firestorm of debate about whether the city and its 425,000 residents are ready for the big leagues — or even want to play.

Proponents position themselves as dreamers, portraying Halifax as the little-city-that-could. Halifax may not have all the infrastruc­ture or workforce to accommodat­e the online retail behemoth now, they say, but if they come, we’ll build it.

“Imagine if we never reached for the stars or took a leap of faith,” city solicitor John Traves said on Twitter.

Mayor Mike Savage admits the city is a “dark horse,” but says Halifax has a shot.

“We’ve got the lobsters and donairs, fiddles and bagpipes, but that’s not a value propositio­n,” he said in an interview. “The value propositio­n is, we have the skilled labour, the tech sector, the quality of life.”

But critics say Amazon could pose an existentia­l threat to what makes the city so appealing, turning Halifax into a congested company town.

Ben Wedge of the Halifax Cycling Coalition pointed out in a column in the daily Chronicle-Herald that Amazon’s workforce would require one-in-five of the city’s current workers, and nearly a third of the office space.

“Halifax is too small, in the wrong location, and not ready to offer 21stcentur­y transporta­tion options,” he argued. “Instead of spending time and money chasing Amazon, the city should focus our efforts on building the kind of city major companies are looking for.”

Even some business leaders have questioned the logic of bidding on Amazon’s next headquarte­rs.

“Imagine if we put the creativity, money and time of an Amazon (headquarte­rs) bid into something actually achievable for Halifax,” Gordon Stevens, who owns Halifax’s Uncommon Grounds cafes and other local businesses, said on Twitter.

Still, Savage describes the bid as a capacitybu­ilding exercise, a chance to nurture ambition in an East Coast province that has traditiona­lly relied on shipbuildi­ng and fishing but has become Canada’s fifth-biggest tech hub.

“We may be an outlier but we think we’ve got a shot,” he said. “Everything that we’re doing as a city is pulling together our capacity to give us a sense of where we are and what we can go for.”

Halifax council will have a chance to review the city’s bid behind closed doors before it’s submitted to Amazon by the Oct. 19 deadline.

Savage said the coalition putting the bid together, including city hall, businesses, universiti­es and local organizati­ons, has identified a possible location for the Amazon campus in Halifax. But he said “we’re keeping it all close to our chests” until the deadline has passed.

The mayor dismissed criticisms that Halifax lacks what Amazon needs.

“Wherever Amazon goes people are going to congregate, so they will bring people to Halifax,” he said. “But we do have a very high graduating population here ... and the city has been growing faster than it has for a long time.”

Indeed, a convergenc­e of factors — booming manufactur­ing and constructi­on sectors, healthy employment and income gains, strong housing and retail markets, off-the charts population gains — have made Halifax one of the country’s fastestgro­wing cities.

Halifax’s short commutes, affordable homes, clean air and nearby beaches, as well as universiti­es and colleges, military bases, startups and convenient time zone and geography, are sure to be underscore­d in the bid.

“When Amazon started, the city of Seattle was just over 500,000 people,” he said. “So if they’re looking for something similar to Seattle, I think we have it.”

Instead of spending time and money chasing Amazon, the city should focus our efforts on building the kind of city major companies are looking for. – Ben Wedge – Halifax Cycling Coalition

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? A sailboat is seen in front of the Halifax skyline in this July 2016 file photo.
Canadian Press photo A sailboat is seen in front of the Halifax skyline in this July 2016 file photo.

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