New York Post

NY Labor Pains

Why taxpayers will pony up more for Amazon

- E.J. McMAHON E.J. McMahon is research director at the Empire Center for Public Policy and an adjunct fellow at the Manhattan Institute.

GOV. Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio have crafted a massive taxpayer subsidy to entice Amazon into creating 25,000 to 40,000 high-paying jobs in New York.

The purported cost-benefit ratio, described by Cuomo as the most lopsided in the history of economic developmen­t deals, is probably skewed by the assumption that a prime swath of Long Island City would otherwise remain underdevel­oped.

Still, the state-city deal to bring one of Amazon’s two new headquarte­rs to Long Island City might at least have provided New York City with another big benefit — a much-needed model of advanced, efficient building practices. After all, Amazon isn’t just a big corporatio­n: It’s widely admired as a global leader in technologi­cal innovation.

Instead, it appears the deal will ensure that Amazon is saddled with the same arcane and outmoded constructi­on-union work rules and compensati­on levels that have saddled New York City with the nation’s highest urban constructi­on costs.

Amazon is promising to invest $2.5 billion in Long Island City in the coming decade, and up to $3.6 billion when ancillary community projects are counted over 15 years.

At the same time, the company is investing $2.5 billion in Crystal City, Va., the second of its new headquarte­rs sites. Yet Virginia was able to land its project for a reported total incentive package of around just $800 million, while New York state alone is offering the company $1.2 billion in tax credits, plus capital grants of up to $502 million.

Why the difference? After all, as any house- or apartment-hunter can tell you, the Washington area isn’t exactly cheap. However, Queens project enhancemen­ts and New York taxes aside, it’s a

lot less expensive to build a big commercial project in the DC area than in New York City.

There’s no specific mention of unions or union labor preference­s in the written agreement between the state, city and Amazon, but de Blasio promised “you’re going to see union jobs in constructi­on [and] building services,” and Cuomo could be expected to insist on it.

As if to confirm as much, the governor’s follow-up press release on the agreement included a quote from Gary Labarbera, president of the Building and Constructi­on Trades Council: “We look forward to working closely with Amazon and the community to ensure that the project includes good middle-class constructi­on jobs with benefits and high quality permanent jobs.”

Translatio­n: The unions expect a piece of the pie.

There’s no telling how much of a union-labor premium is buried in the half-billion dollars of state capital grants Cuomo is willing to hand the company.

Nor has Cuomo disclosed where up to $502 million in capital grants will come from — although he doesn’t lack for discretion­ary pots of cash. The governor is now sitting on $411 million in still-unallocate­d fines and penalty payments collected from various financial institutio­ns for violations of state banking or securities laws.

He can also draw from huge stashes of “state and community facilities” pork-barrel funds that state lawmakers (including the soon-to-vanish Republican Senate majority) have obligingly expanded for him over the past eight years.

Union pay rates and work rules can add 25 percent to constructi­on-labor costs in New York City, according to past analysis of the state’s “prevailing wage” law covering public-works projects.

So all else being equal, assuming labor makes up roughly half of constructi­on costs at the Long Island City complex, Cuomo would have to offer Amazon an extra $50 million to hire union-only contractor­s for constructi­on work that might be completed for $400 million by “open shop” competitor­s — which is presumably what the company would use if it was funding a project this big fully on its own dime.

Beyond all the other questions it raises, the Amazon incentive package looks like a classic New York deal, rigged to grease all the right special-interest groups.

This isn’t just an insult to countless thousands of brickand-mortar Main Street businesses across New York, whose tax money will now subsidize the global behemoth that is eating their lunch.

It’s also the ultimate in political self-dealing by the governor and Mayor de Blasio, who will use Amazon as a funnel to deliver hundreds of millions in work to union allies.

Kind of gives new meaning to the phrase “Amazon Prime.”

 ??  ?? Premium wages: Union-only constructi­on workers, like those who have worked at the Hudson Yards site, can add 25 percent to labor costs.
Premium wages: Union-only constructi­on workers, like those who have worked at the Hudson Yards site, can add 25 percent to labor costs.
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