Houston Chronicle

Amazon wooed with sun, fun and booze

- By Matt O’Brien

BOSTON — Mayors from Toledo to Tulsa are so eager to woo Amazon’s much-vaunted second headquarte­rs that they’re brandishin­g bourbon, selling the sun, whispering sweet nothings to the company and even pushing its buttons. Literally. The Associated Press talked to the leaders of more than 50 cities or metropolit­an regions about the different ways they’re showcasing themselves to the Seattle e-commerce company. The bids are due Thursday.

300 days in the sun

It’s easy for many metropolit­an areas to emphasize their similariti­es to Seattle. It’s a little gutsier for cities to cast themselves as an escape from the rainy Pacific Northwest.

“We have 300 days of sunshine,” says J.J. Ament, chief executive officer of the Metro Denver Economic Developmen­t Corp. “Our skies are bluer and prettier.” Ament’s organizati­on is compiling a formal bid that also highlights Colorado’s 45,000 miles of hiking, biking and all-purpose trails.

Austin, coincident­ally enough, also touts 300 sunny days and outdoor activities — plus live music, festivals, sports and a “big foodie-friendly community,” says Mike Berman, a spokesman for the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce.

But wait: Albuquerqu­e, N.M., has upped the ante with a claimed 310 cloudless days. (The city also makes a naked plea to sentiment, noting that it’s the birthplace of Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.)

You dashing rogue

Many cities are flirting with the idea of landing Amazon’s new headquarte­rs. One Alabama city is REALLY flirting.

“Amazon, we got a 100% match on Bumble. Wanna go on a date?” Birmingham asks the company in one of hundreds of Tweets it has sent the company.

The city even set up giant replicas of Amazon’s Dash Buttons — those dangerous order-a-productwit­h-a-single-press gizmos — to send one of more than 600 pre-generated tweets to the company.

“We are Chipotle and these other cities are Taco Bell, Amazon,” one said.

Beer and bourbon

Bars, pubs, taverns, wine bars. Many cities insist they’ve got the best options for Amazon happy hour (assuming that local alcohol laws allow it).

“We have 348 breweries in Colorado, second only to California,” Denver’s Ament says. “That’s six per 100,000 residents.”

Louisville is playing up its role as the gateway to Kentucky bourbon country. Even the farthest-flung locales lay claim to a vibrant nightlife.

“Lots of bars and restaurant­s, plays, lots of music,” says Mike Savage, mayor of Halifax, Nova Scotia. The city, one of several in Canada making a bid, once billed itself as “the next Seattle” based on its 1990s grunge scene.

Hot (and hip) or not

Looking for hot and hip? “Providence is particular­ly hot and hip,” says Rhode Island Commerce Secretary Stefan Pryor, who led efforts to craft a pitch for the country’s smallest state. “Our capital city was identified by GQ, Gentleman’s Quarterly magazine, as the coolest city in America.” (This is true .)

Others are happier embracing their hip-to-besquarene­ss.

“We’re sort of a putyour-head-down community, where we just work real hard and build real business,” says Howard Tullman, the CEO of 1871, a Chicago tech incubator.

Spinning hurricanes

For Columbus, Ohio, one of the selling points is its location: well out of the way of natural catastroph­es. Albuquerqu­e also brags about an absence of earthquake­s and hurricanes. That could be important if Amazon wants to avoid rising sea levels or extreme weather. If not, there’s always Houston.

“I think the world saw Houston at its best in the local recovery efforts,” says Bob Harvey, president and CEO of the Greater Houston Partnershi­p. The city’s people, he said, are the kind Amazon “might want on hand.”

Do the right thing

New Jersey’s largest city talks up fast internet, its airport and recent downtown redevelopm­ent efforts. But Newark also offers Amazon the opportunit­y to make a “strong social impact statement,” says Aisha Glover, president of the Newark Community Economic Developmen­t Corp.

Karen Freeman-Wilson, the mayor in post-industrial Gary, Ind., says Amazon should use this opportunit­y to “leave a legacy as having transforme­d or been a part of the transforma­tion of a legacy city.”

High equality scores

Most bidders are highlighti­ng their city’s diversity and openness. At least two — Philadelph­ia and St. Petersburg, Fla. — are touting a perfect LGBT equality score of 100 from an advocacy group’s municipal index .

Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi says Canada is the logical choice if Amazon is “interested in recruiting an internatio­nal workforce of 50,000,” given nativist sentiment in the U.S.

No thanks, Amazon

And then there are those hardy communitie­s that simply decided they’re better off not making a desperate pitch.

Alaskadidn’t even bother applying, given Amazon’s requiremen­t for a metro area with more than a million residents. (There aren’t that many people in the entire state.)

The mayors of San Antonio and San Jose, Calif., say they were turned off by the bidding war Amazon is creating among states and cities. “Blindly giving away the farm isn’t our style,” San Antonio area officials wrote Bezos.

 ?? Brynn Anderson / Associated Press ?? Zavian Tate, a student at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, pushes a large Amazon Dash button. The Dash buttons are part of the city’s campaign to lure Amazon’s second headquarte­rs.
Brynn Anderson / Associated Press Zavian Tate, a student at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, pushes a large Amazon Dash button. The Dash buttons are part of the city’s campaign to lure Amazon’s second headquarte­rs.
 ?? Luis Santana / Tampa Bay Times file ?? A rainbow banner is part of a June gay pride parade in St. Petersburg, Fla. The city is seeking Amazon by touting a perfect LGBT equality score.
Luis Santana / Tampa Bay Times file A rainbow banner is part of a June gay pride parade in St. Petersburg, Fla. The city is seeking Amazon by touting a perfect LGBT equality score.

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