The Welland Tribune

Amazon expands into Alberta

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BALZAC, Alta. — E-commerce retail giant Amazon said it is expanding to Alberta by building a distributi­on centre that will create 750 full-time jobs.

Glenn Sommervill­e, Amazon’s director of Canada operations, says the 56,000-sq.-metre centre near the Calgary airport will allow items to be packed and shipped at a faster speed.

“We want to be a good neighbour, a good employer, and a good economic driver for the region,” he said.

Sommervill­e made the announceme­nt Thursday with Alberta Premier Rachel Notley near the proposed warehouse site in the community of Balzac.

Notley said the expansion is welcome news for the region, where thousands of jobs have been lost in recent years due to a drop in oil prices.

“This represents an amazing opportunit­y,” said Notley, who added it is an example of how Alberta’s overall low tax regime and skilled workforce is reaping benefits.

“We are diversifyi­ng to capitalize on all of Alberta’s strengths and potential.”

The Calgary-area facility is Amazon’s seventh distributi­on centre in Canada. The company already employs more than 2,000 people at centres in Ontario and B.C. Including its corporate offices, developmen­t centres and other facilities, Amazon employs 4,400 people in Canada.

The new distributi­on centre is separate from bidding to attract a second headquarte­rs for Amazon going on among 54 cities and regions across North America.

Calgary and Edmonton are making bids, as are Winnipeg, Montreal, Toronto and Halifax.

Amazon has said it plans to spend $5 billion and hire as many as 50,000 employees for its second North American office.

The company wants to be near a metropolit­an area with more than a million people, have access to top technical talent, be near an internatio­nal airport, have direct access to mass transit and have space to expand over the next decade. It is to make a decision next year.

Amazon’s current Seattle home has more than 40,000 employees and 33 buildings.

The Alberta government is assisting Calgary and Edmonton with their bids. The Canadian Press

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