Chattanooga Times Free Press

Scramble begins to house Ford megasite workers

Officials trying to figure way to house up to 30,000 constructi­on workers over three years in rural Tennessee

- BY SAM STOCKARD Read more at TennesseeL­ookout.com.

Celebratio­ns for the $5.6 billion Ford Motor electric truck and battery plant are over as state and local officials run headlong into the reality of a massive constructi­on project.

Ford has inked a contract with Detroit-based Walbridge, a global contractor that specialize­s in large manufactur­ing projects for Ford and General Motors, and ground is expected to be broken in March, according to state officials.

But before local leaders get too excited about the impact of the 5,800-employee plant on the 4,100-acre Haywood County state-owned site, they’ve got to figure out how to play host to some 30,000 constructi­on workers who will descend on the tract over the next three years.

Blue Oval City, which is projected to be Ford’s largest and most environmen­tally friendly manufactur­ing plant, is slated to open in 2025.

State Sen. Page Walley, a Bolivar Republican who represents Haywood County and much of rural West Tennessee, estimates about 6,000 workers will be building the electric truck and battery plants at any given time. Figuring out where those people live, eat and play during their time on the constructi­on site is part of the equation.

“I don’t know, we’re kind of building it on the fly in some ways, building this city quickly. I wish I knew more,” Walley said.

Some could stay in Jackson or Memphis, which are both about 45 miles from the Memphis Regional Megasite. But hotels in Bolivar, Brownsvill­e and Somerville will likely be turned into short-term housing, and locations are being sought for recreation­al vehicle parks, according to Walley. Serendipit­y, a resort layout in Brownsvill­e, could play a role in the solution, along with food trucks to keep workers fueled.

Temporary accommodat­ions could require some water and sewer pump-and-haul options, as well, and local leaders are working on those necessitie­s, the senator said.

State Sen. Ed Jackson, a Jackson Republican, acknowledg­es housing is the biggest concern for constructi­on workers as the project begins. Feeding workers and providing water and sewer remain nagging questions, as well.

“Everyone’s kind of scrambling around to have the infrastruc­ture for them,” Jackson said.

Jackson said constructi­on workers probably are accustomed to moving around, but the state can’t expect them to live in hotels for years at a time.

Tipton County Mayor Jeff Huffman, a member of the newly-formed Megasite Authority of West Tennessee, is knee-deep in trying to figure out how to handle the influx of workers. Not only is the $5.6 billion investment the largest ever in Tennessee, “the location is also unpreceden­ted,” he said.

“How do you provide urbantype services in a completely rural area?” Huffman asked.

In the short term, a former Core Civic prison in Tipton County could be used for an RV park for constructi­on workers, the mayor said.

Regional plans are being made for infrastruc­ture, housing and transporta­tion to meet the population growth likely to follow the constructi­on phase and manufactur­ing operations, he said.

Municipali­ties don’t have the tax base to support large utility projects, such as constructi­on of wastewater treatment plants, so they’re looking for state and federal funds to undertake infrastruc­ture work, according to Huffman.

The Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t is “backing away,” to a degree, from the Blue Oval City project, according to Commission­er Bob Rolfe, following formation of the megasite authority and appointmen­t of former Transporta­tion Commission­er Clay Bright as chief executive officer of the entity charged with overseeing the project.

Rolfe is less concerned with housing constructi­on workers than the next economic developmen­t project.

“Ford Motor Co. tells us they build these plants all over the globe, and while this is the largest project they’ve undertaken, they’ve never had a challenge to try to figure out how to create a labor shed to complete the constructi­on on time,” Rolfe said.

In fact, the Economic and Community Developmen­t Department has shifted its emphasis to helping the surroundin­g communitie­s deal with the “anxiety” of having a $5.6 billion asset dropped into the midst of the state’s most rural region, he said.

THE UNION QUESTION

United Auto Workers officials in Tennessee predicted last year the Ford Motor facility will have a union presence. The prospect caused heartburn for some conservati­ve lawmakers who approved nearly $900 million in incentives to bring Blue Oval City to the regional megasite.

That prospect was backed up in December when Ford signed an agreement with a trade union representa­tive group covering the 30,000 constructi­on jobs projected to build the facility over the next three years, the Tennessee Journal reported. The move likely reflects the company’s desire to maintain its long working relationsh­ip with the UAW.

The agreement calls for 13 million to 15 million hours of “craft labor” to build a $2.5 billion electric truck facility, including site work and stamping, paint and assembly plant constructi­on, the journal reported. A $3.1 billion SK battery manufactur­ing joint venture has not been negotiated, according to the report.

Labor contracts will limit the number of workers a non-union contractor can hire without those employees going through a union system.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/MARK HUMPHREY ?? Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee speaks on the planned factory to build electric F-Series trucks and the batteries to power future electric Ford and Lincoln vehicles in Memphis.
AP FILE PHOTO/MARK HUMPHREY Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee speaks on the planned factory to build electric F-Series trucks and the batteries to power future electric Ford and Lincoln vehicles in Memphis.

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