The Hamilton Spectator

Amazon receives 238 proposals to be home to its second headquarte­rs

- JONATHAN O’CONNELL

The tally is in: Amazon received 238 proposals from cities, states, districts and territorie­s interested in hosting the company’s second headquarte­rs.

The online retail giant published a map Monday showing that bids came from D.C. and all but seven states — Arkansas, Hawaii, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming — as well as from most of southern Canada, three regions of Mexico and Puerto Rico.

Last month, Amazon announced it wanted to open a second North American headquarte­rs, setting off a scramble among economic developmen­t officials from the United States, Canada and Mexico eager for as many as 50,000 jobs and $5 billion of investment the company says it plans to make in another city.

Toronto, Montreal, Edmonton, Halifax and Calgary are some of the Canadian cities that submitted proposals. Hamilton, Burlington and Niagara made a joint bid.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau penned a personal letter to Amazon chief executive officer and founder Jeff Bezos advocating for HQ2.

Seattle-based Amazon launched the search for “HQ2” by publishing its criteria online. Bezos issued a statement saying he expected the new location “to be a full equal to our Seattle headquarte­rs. Amazon HQ2 will bring billions of dollars in upfront and ongoing investment­s, and tens of thousands of high-paying jobs. We’re excited to find a second home.”

If Amazon fulfils its plan to add 50,000 jobs and eight million square feet of office space in another city, it will amount to the largest corporate move in decades, though the company plans to maintain its current Seattle headquarte­rs.

Some governors and mayors have already begun floating subsidies of as much as $7 billion while others have filmed online videos or launched marketing campaigns aligned with their bids. On the day bids were due, Oct. 19, buildings around New York City were lit orange to match the company’s logo.

The next step is for Amazon’s real estate team to sort through the bids and decide which proposals to consider more closely. It plans to make a decision early next year.

Bloomberg reported last week that Atlanta, Boston, Chicago and Detroit are among the leading contenders to land Amazon’s second headquarte­rs.

Urban policy analysts have warned that jurisdicti­ons ought to tread lightly when offering single corporatio­ns large subsidies, arguing that investing in workforce, education and transporta­tion tends to be a better bet for economic growth.

To accommodat­e the company’s growth in Seattle, taxpayers funded hundreds of millions of dollars in improvemen­ts, although Amazon directly contribute­d $30 billion to the local economy.

Amazon estimated that its investment­s in Seattle from 2010 to 2016 resulted in an additional $38 billion to the city’s economy, where each dollar the company invested created an extra $1.40 for the city’s economy. Housing advocates point to spikes in rents in Seattle as evidence that bidding cities ought to prepare for rising housing costs if Amazon decides to locate there.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An Amazon employee gives her dog a biscuit as the pair head into a company building, where dogs are welcome, in Seattle.
ELAINE THOMPSON, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An Amazon employee gives her dog a biscuit as the pair head into a company building, where dogs are welcome, in Seattle.

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