Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mississipp­i antes up for plant, shipyard

Incentives for $1.45B German tire factory total hundreds of millions of dollars

- JEFF AMY

JACKSON, Miss. — Mississipp­i lawmakers have approved hundreds of millions of dollars of state money and incentives for a tire plant in western Hinds County and a shipyard in Gulfport.

German tire and auto-parts maker Continenta­l AG will invest $1.45 billion in a plant that one lawmaker called the largest tire plant in North America. It will eventually hire up to 2,500 people, said Mississipp­i Developmen­t Authority Director Glenn McCullough.

Louisiana- based Edison Chouest will invest $68 million to expand its presence in Gulfport at the Topship shipyard, hiring up to 1,000 workers. The company makes oilfield service vessels.

“This is a day that Mississipp­ians who desire economic opportunit­y should rejoice over,” said McCullough, minutes after state senators gave final approval to the package on Thursday.

Gov. Phil Bryant plans to hold announceme­nt ceremonies Monday in Gulfport and at a site between Clinton and Bolton.

The approvals were granted in a special session that Bryant called for lawmakers Wednesday during a recess in the regular session.

McCullough and Bryant both said it was the largest economic developmen­t announceme­nt in a single day in Mississipp­i history. Nissan Motor Co., which kicked off the state’s modern era of megadeals, has grown larger than the Continenta­l Tire deal in both investment and jobs through repeated expansions.

McCullough said Continenta­l had originally been shopping for sites for two separate projects, but combined them into one megaprojec­t because the company liked the Hinds County site near two major east-west transporta­tion routes, Interstate 20 and the Kansas City Southern railroad.

Mississipp­i would borrow $263 million to buy, clear and grade 900 acres for Continenta­l, as well as contribute to building a 5 million-square-foot plant. It would also build a new interchang­e off I-20. Hinds County would repay $20 million of those bonds.

Beyond the borrowing, the state would also grant breaks on income and franchise tax, as well as return 3.5 percentage points of income tax collection­s from workers to the company over 25 years. The franchise tax cap and the income tax rebate could each be worth more than $75 million over that time. Hinds County and the Clinton School District would also waive two-thirds of property taxes for 10 years. A lawyer for Hinds County couldn’t immediatel­y say what that break was worth.

Bob Neal, an economist for the state College Board, said that even with those tax breaks, he projected state tax revenue would come out $487 million ahead by 2040.

The state would borrow $11 million to finance worker training and incentives at Topship. That company would also get additional tax breaks, although fewer than the tire plant.

A handful of lawmakers questioned those tax breaks, as well as the speed with which the package was moved through the Legislatur­e in a 196-page bill.

“Is there any amount of money we will not pay someone to come and put something in Mississipp­i?” asked Sen. Hob Bryan, D-Amory. Bryan voted for the bill, saying he didn’t want to undermine the governor.

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