Los Angeles Times

Amazon misplays its hand in N.Y.

Cancellati­on bolsters its reputation of a bully that cares little for communitie­s, Michael Hiltzik writes.

- MICHAEL HILTZIK

Well, that should show them.

Stung by intensifyi­ng opposition to a $3-billion incentive handout from New York city and state, Amazon on Thursday abruptly canceled its plans to build a new half-headquarte­rs complex in the New York City borough of Queens.

The outcome is shaping up as a disaster — but arguably for Amazon more than New York. It reinforces the giant company’s reputation as a grasping bully that cares little for the communitie­s where it operates.

Amazon’s withdrawal from New York may well inspire more opposition to its quest for incentives and other accommodat­ions in northern Virginia, which was to share the big headquarte­rs developmen­t with New York, and other communitie­s where Amazon dangled the prospect of major business expansion.

“This is going to be a rapidly metastasiz­ing process where people are going to be emboldened to push back,” Richard Florida of the University of Toronto, an urban developmen­t expert and critic of Amazon’s plans, told me.

It will also intensify scrutiny of the impact that major corporate expansions have on their communitie­s. In Amazon’s case, its original headquarte­rs city of Seattle has been struggling with the displaceme­nt of residents and businesses by soaring housing costs and commercial rents and Amazon’s resist-

ance to contributi­ng some of its billions of dollars in resources to alleviate the problems.

In New York, where displaceme­nt and gentrifica­tion had already become a political flashpoint, Amazon’s entry was almost certain to make things worse.

“People in New York knew what had happened in Manhattan, what has almost finished happening in Brooklyn, and was already happening in Queens,” said Greg LeRoy, executive director of Good Jobs First, which tracks excessive corporate incentives. “They saw this project coming in and putting that on steroids.”

Let’s briefly recap the process that brought us to this point. Amazon announced in September 2017 its plans to create a second headquarte­rs satrapy somewhere in North America to share responsibi­lities with Seattle. The prospect of a $5-billion complex staffed with 50,000 employees earning $100,000 or more predictabl­y set up an orgy of civic preening and, more to the point, immense offers of tax breaks and other incentives worth billions of dollars.

The company played 238 cities, states and regions against one another until last November, when it announced that the brass ring had been won jointly by northern Virginia and New York.

On the face of things, this whole process was a sham from the start. Amazon’s original request for proposals specified a metro area of at least 1 million population; an internatio­nal airport no more than 45 minutes away; mass transit service on site and major highways not more than two miles distant; a “highly educated labor pool”; good cellphone and fiber coverage; and a political and social culture that supports “a diverse population” and an “overall high quality of life.”

But Amazon also made clear its interest in seeing bidding communitie­s come up with the long green: “Please provide a summary of total incentives offered for the Project by the state/ province and local community,” its bid document said. “Please provide a brief descriptio­n of the incentive item, the timing of incentive payment/realizatio­n, and a calculatio­n of the incentive amount.”

Whether out of hubris or ignorance, the company seemed to be blindsided by the community opposition to its selection of the Queens community of Long Island City for one half of its new headquarte­rs, at a price of nearly $3 billion in state and local incentives.

“Jeff Bezos should fire his whole site selection staff,” said Florida, referring to Amazon’s chairman and chief executive. “If they had done their due diligence, they would have known there would be a backlash — with this level of incentives in a big city like New York, with a very strong activist community, and a progressiv­e-leaning city council and state legislator­s — they weren’t going to stand for this level of corporate welfare, and they didn’t.”

The political skepticism the project would inspire wasn’t hard to divine — the New York site is adjacent to the district in which progressiv­e firebrand Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez unseated a long-term machine Democrat in a party primary for Congress. Ocasio-Cortez’s election to the House came only a week before Amazon’s site announceme­nt.

“Who in their right mind would put this project at Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s front door?” Florida asked.

But Amazon had grown accustomed to bending local politician­s to its will. That was certainly the case in Seattle, where the company last year bullied the City Council into repealing a “head tax” that would have raised $45 million over five years from big corporatio­ns, chiefly Amazon.

That history seemed to blind Amazon to the need to help its host communitie­s deal with the indisputab­le costs associated with largescale developmen­t, especially in places already suffering from overdevelo­pment.

“A company has to figure out that if it wants to be in a community, it has to do it quietly and deftly and gently, and pay its fair share of taxes and be a good corporate citizen,” Florida said. “Why would you try to extract stuff like this from your new hometown?”

Amazon might have been able to tamp down the opposition. “One can guess that Amazon might have gained entry by engaging with local groups and trying to address local impacts,” LeRoy told me. “But that would require Amazon’s DNA changing. Everyone in New York knew what they did to Seattle with the head tax. They have no illusions about how much ice runs through Amazon’s veins.”

Amazon plainly became a prisoner of its own demand for municipal handouts. After its incentives materializ­ed in New York, the company tried to downplay the role of tax incentives in its decision.

“Incentives did not drive this process for us,” company spokesman Jay Carney said. “Our No. 1 criterion for us was the availabili­ty of existing talent and the possibilit­y of recruiting and luring new talent to come.”

Yet its withdrawal from New York effectivel­y lays that claim to rest. Nothing has changed in the last three months about the “availabili­ty of existing talent” in Long Island City or the potential for recruiting new employees to a neighborho­od just over the river from Manhattan. The only change was in the apparent willingnes­s of residents and their political representa­tives to roll over for a $3-billion incentive deal for a company that manifestly does not need the money.

What may be most perplexing about this case is that in strictly financial terms, even the $3 billion in handouts offered by New York is a trivial sum for Amazon. Most of the money would be doled out over 10 years or more in the form of refundable tax credits (that is, Amazon would collect the credits even if they exceeded its tax liability to the state). How significan­t could that be for a company that earned $93.7 billion in gross profit on nearly $233 billion in revenue last year alone?

Moreover, it’s well establishe­d that tax incentives rank low on the list of factors in a company’s siting decision, overshadow­ed by many of the other factors cited by Amazon, such as the availabili­ty of a skilled workforce and transporta­tion and communicat­ion infrastruc­ture. Companies ask for the handouts, and take what they’re offered.

Yet having establishe­d local incentives as a decision factor, Amazon could not easily ignore the opposition in New York — what self-respecting community would pony up billions if the company showed that it was willing to give them up in this case?

LeRoy and Florida think the Amazon experience might be a turning point for American communitie­s’ reliance on corporate incentives to attract jobs, even despite evidence that the incentives almost never pay for themselves.

Big companies haven’t stopped dangling the prospect of economy-changing impacts from their relocation­s in order to extract huge benefits. Some of these big deals have been blowing apart at the seams, notably a record-breaking $4.5-billion subsidy offered by Wisconsin to the Taiwanese electronic­s manufactur­er Foxconn for a factory that is unlikely ever to be built — a deal promoted assiduousl­y by President Trump and former Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker.

But Amazon’s deal had the highest profile of all — “Head and shoulders the biggest headquarte­rs deal on the table,” LeRoy said. “Amazon’s attitude was, ‘You should be grateful we’re coming — we’re going to expect a big payout and you can figure out the fallout later.’ ”

LeRoy points to Bezos’ recent exposure of an alleged extortion attempt by the National Enquirer, which threatened to publish embarrassi­ng photograph­s of Bezos if he didn’t cease investigat­ing the Enquirer’s previous publicatio­n of his personal text messages. In his blog post about the Enquirer’s behavior, Bezos, the richest man in the world, wrote: “If in my position I can’t stand up to this kind of extortion, how many people can?”

By the same token, LeRoy said, “New York said to Jeff Bezos, if a city like us can’t stand up to this extortiona­te site location game you’re playing, who will?”

 ?? Photograph­s by Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? COMMUNITY MEMBERS and activists rally in celebratio­n in New York’s Long Island City neighborho­od after Amazon pulled out of a deal to build a headquarte­rs complex there. Opposition had been growing against $3 billion in incentives offered to the tech giant.
Photograph­s by Drew Angerer Getty Images COMMUNITY MEMBERS and activists rally in celebratio­n in New York’s Long Island City neighborho­od after Amazon pulled out of a deal to build a headquarte­rs complex there. Opposition had been growing against $3 billion in incentives offered to the tech giant.
 ??  ?? ACTIVISTS HAD feared that having Amazon in Long Island City would pro- mote gentrifica­tion and displace low-income residents and small businesses.
ACTIVISTS HAD feared that having Amazon in Long Island City would pro- mote gentrifica­tion and displace low-income residents and small businesses.
 ??  ??
 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? AMAZON’S OFFICES in New York. The company seemed to be blindsided by the opposition to its plan. “Jeff Bezos should fire his whole site selection staff,” an urban developmen­t expert said, referring to Amazon’s chief.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press AMAZON’S OFFICES in New York. The company seemed to be blindsided by the opposition to its plan. “Jeff Bezos should fire his whole site selection staff,” an urban developmen­t expert said, referring to Amazon’s chief.

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