Baltimore Sun

$6.5 billion OK’d to draw Amazon

Tax incentive package for second headquarte­rs is the biggest in state history

- By Erin Cox ecox@baltsun.com twitter.com/ErinatTheS­un

Maryland lawmakers approved $6.5 billion in tax incentives for Amazon on Wednesday, pushing through the largest economic developmen­t package in state history on the hope the internet retail giant will build a new headquarte­rs here.

The massive tax incentive package comes on top of $2 billion in promised infrastruc­ture and transporta­tion improvemen­ts for the White Flint Mall area of Montgomery County, one of the 20 spots across the country Amazon picked as finalists for its so-called HQ2 project.

Maryland’s $8.5 billion package, which is $3.5 billion bigger than originally advertised by Republican Gov. Larry Hogan, would be the largest publicly known incentive offered to Amazon in exchange for building its second headquarte­rs. The next largest offer came from New Jersey, which offered $7 billion for the project to be built in Newark.

Hogan’s administra­tion contends the pack- age will cost less — $5.27 billion, with the tax incentives costing $3.27 billion. The governor has called it “the single greatest economic developmen­t opportunit­y in a generation.”

Amazon set off a nationwide bidding contest last fall when it announced it was looking for a site for a second headquarte­rs. The HQ2project is expected to create 50,000 high-paying jobs and a $5 billion investment.

Were the headquarte­rs to be built in Maryland, the state would get a $17 billion annual infusion to its economy eventually, according to a state-funded study. The site in Rockville is one of three Amazon picked in the Washington area.

Hogan originally championed building HQ2 at Port Covington in Baltimore, but when the city lost out, he threw his weight behind the location in the Washington suburbs. Hogan pushed for lawmakers to approve the deal, which passed with bipartisan but not unanimous support.

The incentive package — a mix of credits, incentives and grants that will be doled out over more than a decade — dwarfs any other economic developmen­t deal in Maryland by several orders of magnitude: The most costly existing deals are measured in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

House Majority Leader C. William Frick, a Democrat from Montgomery County, called the deal “the single most important economic project” that has ever come before the state.

“This is the single most important company in the future economy,” Frick said.

Lawmakers who explained why they backed the deal said the ripple effects from Amazon could drive employment and improve economic fortunes across the state.

Republican Del. Robert B. Long represents the Dundalk area of Baltimore County, where shuttered steel mills and the decline of manufactur­ing led to hard economic times. Long said he voted for the deal because he expects prosperity propelled by Amazon to “spill over” into his district.

“This is a vote for the future of Maryland’s economy,” Long said. “This is not corporate welfare. They have to give us jobs before they get anything. It’s a no-brainer.”

In the House of Delegates, many Democrats from Prince George’s County and Baltimore City voted against the proposal.

The deal, which Hogan called the PRIME Act — named for Amazon’s membership program — would provide Amazon incentives if it creates at least 40,000 jobs that pay an average of $100,000 a year. The proposal would provide a $10 million-a-year grant out of the state’s Sunny Day fund, it would exempt constructi­on materials used to build the project from sales taxes, and it would create a new, annual tax credit equal to 5.75 percent of each new job’s wages. The company could apply for that tax credit every year.

Legislativ­e analysts say the package would cost state and local government­s $6.5 billion over the next 35 years in lost tax revenue and increased costs.

That huge tab prompted several state lawmakers to disparage the proposal as unnecessar­y “corporate welfare.”

“Maryland’s going to give one of the biggest corporatio­ns in America a $6.5 billion corporate welfare check,” said Del. Herbert H. McMillan, a Republican from Anne Arundel County. “A $6.5 billion corporate welfare check paid out over a generation with the sweat and labor of Maryland's small businesses. ... There's no free lunch. Someone's tax dollars are going to pay for this.”

Anne R. Kaiser, a Montgomery County Democrat who leads the Ways and Means Committee that worked on the package, said the deal only takes effect when Amazon delivers on its promised jobs and incentives. If they don’t, the state is not on the hook for the tax deals, she said.

“We’re not writing a blank check. We’re staggering incentives,” she said.

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