Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Firm installing itself at Little Rock port

- NOEL OMAN ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Joseph Flaherty of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

LITTLE ROCK — Trex Co. Inc. a leading maker of decking, railing and outdoor items from recycled materials, intends to build a manufactur­ing plant at the Port of Little Rock, bringing with it more than 500 jobs, a nearly $400 million investment and an environmen­tally friendly reputation.

“We’re extremely excited to be announcing Trex’s investment in Little Rock, Arkansas,” Bryan Fairbanks, Trex president and chief executive officer since April 2020, said at an announceme­nt at the port. “The team has welcomed us with open arms. We couldn’t be more excited about the opportunit­y as we move forward.”

Constructi­on and equipping the company’s third and largest plant in the United States on the 289-acre site will be financed in part by $350 million in general revenue bonds issued by the city. The bonds are paid back by the company for which they were issued.

The state also has pledged a reported $12 million in road and rail improvemen­ts within the port to accommodat­e the new plant, according to Bryan Day, the port’s top executive. They include eliminatin­g one road and extending another, and the addition of a rail spur to serve the plant. State officials didn’t immediatel­y confirm the amount Tuesday.

The plant, once it is fully operationa­l, is expected to generate 1,500 to 2,000 rail cars a year for the port, which charges on average $325 per rail car switch, or up to an additional $650,000 in annual revenue, Day said.

In a prepared statement, he said an undisclose­d minimum annual number of rail cars will be guaranteed by Trex for the next 20 years.

Rail, as well as barge traffic, have fallen sharply at the port this year. The Trex rail revenue won’t come soon enough to forestall resulting cuts in the port’s 2022 budget, Day said.

The port already had invested more than $4 million in the land its board voted to give Trex at a special meeting Tuesday morning. The land included 153 acres that the port acquired from the Quapaw Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma in two separate transactio­ns for a total of $3.1 million.

Deals for some of the parcels didn’t close until last week, according to Day. The transactio­ns were not posted on the assessor’s website Tuesday.

The city had committed $10 million to the port for land acquisitio­n under a sales tax initiative that expires in December. The city has committed an additional $10 million to the port for land, including $5 million that it gave to the port earlier this month.

“Today marks the culminatio­n of the vision of Little Rock residents to expand our port to expand job opportunit­ies in Central Arkansas,” Day said. “Strategic investment and creative partnershi­ps continue to be a recipe for success. We are thrilled to welcome Trex to Little Rock and appreciate their investment and commitment.”

Little Rock Mayor Frank Scott Jr. credited the city’s strengths with helping attract Trex.

“This regional manufactur­ing and distributi­on center will benefit greatly from our amazing assets – those being river, road, rail and air all intersecti­ng in one place,” he said. “And our residents will benefit from the addition of hundreds of high-wage jobs added to the economy.”

At a special meeting Tuesday afternoon, the city Board of Directors ratified conveyance of the land to Trex, the bond issue as well as Trex Co.’s participat­ion in a state tax credit program.

Trex products are available in Little Rock at Lowe’s and Home Depot home improvemen­t stores. There are nine of the stores within 25 miles of the port.

Pulaski County’s County Judge Barry Hyde can vouch for that. He said he built a new backyard deck at his home with Trex materials, not knowing that Trex was coming to Little Rock.

“We discovered them before they discovered us,” he said. “It’s a great product.”

The company is already advertisin­g jobs for the plant even though constructi­on isn’t expected to begin until early 2022, and production won’t start until 2024.

Still, Gov. Asa Hutchinson and a lineup of other officials at the port Tuesday morning extolled the announceme­nt that was, in the words of the governor, “a $400 million day for Arkansas.”

The decision by Trex officials to locate in Little Rock and not other places they considered was a testament to the state’s workforce, geographic location, the port facilities and the opportunit­y that “our outdoor living brings to an outdoor company,” Hutchinson said. “I think it is a very good fit for Arkansas.”

The Winchester, Va.,-based business claims to be the world’s largest manufactur­er of wood-alternativ­e decking and railing. It formed about 30 years ago to design outdoor products that would be easy to maintain.

A key to the company’s success has been “the ability to use recycled materials,” Fairbanks said.

Today, he said, 95% of the content of our deck products are recycled plastic and wood, which will remain key as the company moves forward in the “green economy.”

To underscore the company’s environmen­tal bona fides, the governor cited statistics showing that a 500-squarefoot deck made of Trex products contains the equivalent of 140,000 recycled plastic bags. Given that Americans use on average one plastic bag per day every day of the year, that deck amounts to the plastic contributi­ons from 383 people, he said.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) ?? Trex CEO Bryan Fairbanks (center, left) sits Tuesday with local officials, including Gov. Asa Hutchinson (center, right) during an announceme­nt about a new factory to be built in the Port of Little Rock.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) Trex CEO Bryan Fairbanks (center, left) sits Tuesday with local officials, including Gov. Asa Hutchinson (center, right) during an announceme­nt about a new factory to be built in the Port of Little Rock.

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