Texarkana Gazette

South Texas school board gives Exxon $1.2B tax break

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PORTLAND, Texas—A South Texas school board has approved an estimated $1.2 billion in tax breaks to entice Exxon Mobil Corp. and its Saudi partner to build a $9.3 billion petrochemi­cal plant within its district along the Texas Gulf Coast.

The six-member GregoryPor­tland Independen­t School District board’s unanimous vote late Tuesday adds to a $210 million tax package passed a day earlier by San Patricio County commission­ers.

Exxon and Saudi Arabia Basic Industries Corp. are considerin­g a 1,300-acre site in Portland, just north of Corpus Christi, for the world’s largest ethane steam cracker plant. It would convert natural gas into chemicals used for plastics.

The plant, scheduled to open in 2024, also would provide thousands of jobs.

“We’re the school board and I thought we were supposed to be educating our kids, but it seems like we’re in the middle of economic developmen­t,” Randy Eulenfeld, the board’s president, said. “We will take this responsibi­lity and do the best that we can.”

The school board vote came despite a petition signed by 1,500 people who oppose the plant, citing safety and environmen­tal concerns. The plant would be less than 2 miles from the district high school.

“They are bullying this county, they’re bullying you . we don’t allow bullies in our schools,” Errol Summerlin, who signed the petition, told the board. “We shouldn’t tolerate it from them.”

Under terms of the school board tax plan, the district would limit the taxable value of the new plant at $90 million for 10 years, cutting the district’s tax revenue from an estimated $120.9 million per year to less than $1.2 million per year.

The county’s separate tax abatement package would cover seven years.

The project still needs state approval and Exxon and its Saudi partner are considerin­g another Texas site in Victoria, about 70 miles to the north, and two in Louisiana.

However, company officials have said the Portland site is the front-runner.

“If we do choose the GregoryPor­tland site as our location, I want to assure you that we will follow through with our Good Neighbor Commitment­s on health and safety, quality of life, education and workforce developmen­t, and being good environmen­tal stewards,” project leader Robert Tully told residents in an email Wednesday, according to the San Antonio Express-News.

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