Las Vegas Review-Journal

Wisconsin GOP revises Foxconn bill

Tax credits tied to jobs; local hiring encouraged

- By Todd Richmond The Associated Press

MADISON, Wis. — Wisconsin Republican­s announced revisions Friday to a state incentives package for Foxconn, including provisions that would tie tax credits to the number of living-wage jobs created and encourage the company to hire Wisconsin residents.

The Taiwanese electronic­s giant plans to build a 20 million-squarefoot plant in southeaste­rn Wisconsin that the company says could eventually employ up to 13,000 people. Gov. Scott Walker has introduced a bill that would lay out $3 billion in tax credits for the company, exempt the plant from a host of environmen­tal regulation­s and borrow $252 million for interstate highway repairs around the plant.

Walker’s fellow Republican­s control both the state Senate and Assembly, but the two houses have spent the last two weeks at loggerhead­s over the bill. Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, who represents portions of Racine County where the plant could end up, has been pushing to pass the measure.

Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald has been more cautious, outlining a number of concerns about the plan. One of his main complaints has been that the bill doesn’t lay out any deadlines for Foxconn to create jobs.

Vos released the new version of the bill on Friday afternoon. The changes tie payroll tax credits to the number of jobs Foxconn creates that pay between $30,000 and $100,000.

They also call for state officials to include terms in any contract with the company that encourage hiring Wisconsin residents. Those revisions are designed to allay fears the jobs will be low-paying and could go to Illinois residents.

The new bill also calls for spending $20 million on worker training in the 2019-2021 biennium.

The package retains provisions exempting plant constructi­on materials from local sales taxes. Also still in the bill is a call to borrow the $252 million for road work and requiring a federal match before spending it. New language, though, would require the Legislatur­e’s budget-writing committee to sign off on any spending plan.

The Assembly’s jobs committee plans to vote on the new bill Monday, with a full Assembly floor session to follow on Thursday. Passage would send the bill to the Senate.

Assembly Minority Leader Peter Barca, a Kenosha Democrat, issued a statement saying he was shocked Republican­s would release a new version of the bill three days before the committee vote.

“It’s clear that Republican­s are trying to appear proactive without actually fixing the concerns that many people have with this bill,” Barca said.

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Scott Walker

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