Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lawmakers OK Foxconn deal

$3B package is biggest-ever state incentive to a foreign firm

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SCOTT BAUER

MADISON, Wis. — The Wisconsin Assembly sent a $3 billion incentive package for Taiwan-based Foxconn to Gov. Scott Walker on Thursday, signing off on a deal to lure the electronic­s giant to the state with the biggest subsidy to a foreign company in U.S. history.

The bill approved by a 64-31 vote would make $2.85 billion available to Foxconn Technology Group in cash payments if it invests $10 billion and hires 13,000 workers. The Senate approved the proposal Tuesday.

The Republican governor was in South Korea on a trade mission at the time of the vote but pledged to sign the incentives package into law soon.

Walker, who negotiated the deal and is its lead champion, joined President Donald Trump in announcing Foxconn’s plans to build in Wisconsin at a White House event in July, heralding it as a game-changer for American manufactur­ing.

Assembly Democrats, who didn’t have the votes to stop it, slammed the proposal Thursday as being unfairly rigged to benefit Foxconn at the expense of taxpayers. But Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos defended it as an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y for the state and country.

“What’s rigged is the deal for the taxpayer, the workers, the families and ultimately those of us who have the good foresight to realize when a good deal is put in front of you,” Vos said. Foxconn is the largest

● contract manufactur­er of electronic­s, best known for making iPhones, but with a long list of customers including Sony Corp., Dell Inc. and BlackBerry Ltd. The Wisconsin plant would construct liquid crystal display panels for television­s, computers and other uses.

The total incentive package is 10 times larger than anything ever approved in Wisconsin and would be the biggest state subsidy to a foreign company in the United States.

Critics have warned that there aren’t enough protection­s for taxpayers to recover payments to Foxconn if it automates production and fires

workers. They’ve also said more needs to be done to guarantee that Wisconsin workers and businesses get preference during the constructi­on phase of the plant, and once it’s up and running. Foxconn has said it hopes to open the plant in 2020 with 3,000 workers, but that the workforce could grow to 13,000.

Opponents objected to a provision that would allow the Wisconsin Supreme Court to take appeals of certain lawsuits related to Foxconn, skipping the appeals court. No other business in the state is provided such an expedited route to the Supreme Court.

Under the bill, the company would have 15 years to access the maximum $2.85 billion in cash payments tied to meeting the investment

and hiring numbers. They can also receive $150 million in sales tax exemptions on constructi­on equipment.

The Walker administra­tion is charged with negotiatin­g minimum hiring numbers to trigger the payments in the contract with Foxconn which has not been finalized. Foxconn has also not selected the exact location for the plant, but it has focused on property in Racine County in between Milwaukee and Chicago.

Democrats have also raised alarms about exemptions under the bill that waive requiremen­ts for Foxconn to first develop an environmen­tal impact statement before constructi­ng what could be a 20-million-square-foot campus. Foxconn would also be allowed to build in wetland and waterways.

 ?? AP/ANDY WONG ?? Visitors pass a Foxconn exhibit promoting its Sharp 8K flat screen TV in Beijing on Sept. 7.
AP/ANDY WONG Visitors pass a Foxconn exhibit promoting its Sharp 8K flat screen TV in Beijing on Sept. 7.

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