Las Vegas Review-Journal

▶ AMAZON

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Henderson Mayor Debra March wrote in a statement that her city will collaborat­e with the county, cities and other developmen­t partners to attract Amazon.

“Henderson would love to be home to Amazon’s second company headquarte­rs, but no matter where they decided to locate in Southern Nevada, it would be a huge bonanza for our local economy and workforce,” she wrote.

North Las Vegas Mayor John Lee said he was confused as to why the local municipali­ties would need to agree to form a coalition when the Las Vegas Metro Chamber of Commerce, the GOED and the LVGEA are working to attract projects like Amazon HQ2.

“As a coalition of cities and county, we should be talking about how to get water out to Apex (Industrial Park),” Lee said. “When we have the infrastruc­ture in place, it’ll be easier to attract these projects.”

Amazon’s wish list

Metropolis­es across the U.S. have expressed interest in becoming Amazon’s second home, and the company has made clear the criteria it prefers in a host city.

The Las Vegas Valley clearly meets some of Amazon’s preference­s: proximity to an internatio­nal airport, major highways and colleges. Sisolak said the area’s low-tax climate and low risk of natural disasters could also lure the company to Southern Nevada.

Amazon also is seeking buildings at least 500,000 square feet in size and undevelope­d sites of about 100 acres. County staff members are scouting potential sites, Sisolak said.

Dan Palmeri, a senior director for brokerage firm Cushman and Wakefield Commerce, said the Hughes Center office campus has enough space to meet Amazon’s needs, but landlords there would need to relocate current tenants.

Building a headquarte­rs to meet Amazon’s size requiremen­ts would take at least two years, Palmeri said.

“Can we accommodat­e that? Yes. Do we have 500,000 square feet of office space we could provide them today? No,” he said.

Workforce could be barrier

Southern Nevada could also struggle to fill some of Amazon’s other desires, said Stephen Miller, UNLV economics professor and director for the Center for Business and Economic Research.

The company has said it prefers a location with “the potential to attract and retain strong technical talent.”

Miller noted that while Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh has worked for years to make downtown Las Vegas a tech hub, the initiative has been slow to take off in a community known globally for its hotels, restaurant­s and entertainm­ent.

Fewer than 30 percent of workers in Nevada have a bachelor’s degree, Miller added.

“One area where we might be challenged relative to some other sites would be the labor force. We rely very heavily on leisure and hospitalit­y. Around 30 percent of our employment is in that sector,” he said. “I suppose if they were looking at two sites … all other things equal they probably go with a bigger supply of highly educated people.”

Contact Michael Scott Davidson at sdavidson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3861. Follow @davidsonlv­rj on Twitter.

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