The Denver Post

Reports: Amazon might have 2 cities share HQ2

Sites in New York, northern Virginia could get 25,000 jobs apiece

- By Joseph Pisani, David Klepper and Alan Suderman

NEW YORK» After a year-long search for a second home, Amazon is now reportedly looking to build offices in two cities instead of one, a surprise move that could still have a major impact on the communitie­s it ultimately selects.

New York’s Long Island City as well as Crystal City in northern Virginia have emerged as the front-runners, according to sources familiar with the talks with Amazon.

Selecting those areas would bring more jobs to places that already have plenty. Jed Kolko, the chief economist at job site Indeed, said choosing New York and the D.C. area would “be a much less radical move than many imagined” and another example of “rich places getting richer.”

Amazon had originally promised to bring 50,000 new high-paying jobs to one location, which founder and CEO Jeff Bezos said would be “a full equal” to its Seattle home base. Amazon may now split those jobs equally between two locations, The Wall Street Journal reported, with each getting 25,000 jobs.

That would raise the question of whether the new locations would be headquarte­rs at all. Kolko said a headquarte­rs is “where the decision-makers are,” but it’s unclear where Amazon’s executives — such as Bezos — would spend much of their time. If Amazon decides to split the 50,000 workers in two places, each of those offices would be smaller than Seattle’s, which have more than 40,000 employees.

Virginia officials and some state lawmakers were recently briefed by the head of the state’s economic developmen­t office that Amazon was considerin­g splitting up its second headquarte­rs, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Officials in Virginia believe there’s a strong likelihood that Amazon will pick Crystal City as one of its sites, but the company has not said anything definitive, according to the person, who was not authorized to speak on the record.

“They’re a real secretive company,” the person said of Amazon.

One of the other areas the online retail giant is considerin­g is Long Island City, ac-

cording to a source familiar with the talks. Across the East River from midtown Manhattan in New York, Long Island City is a longtime industrial and transporta­tion hub that has become a fast-growing neighborho­od of riverfront highrises and redevelope­d warehouses, with an enduring industrial foothold and burgeoning arts and tech scenes.

Amazon has been tightlippe­d about the process and declined to comment on the latest news. There’s been intense competitio­n to win over the company, with some throwing around billions of dollars in tax incentives. Amazon kicked off its hunt for a second headquarte­rs in September 2017, initially receiving 238 proposals before narrowing the list to 20 in January.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo met two weeks ago with Amazon officials in his New York City offices, according to the source, who was not authorized to discuss the negotiatio­ns and spoke on condition of anonymity. Cuomo offered to travel to Amazon’s Seattle hometown to continue talks, the source said.

Cuomo told reporters Tuesday that Amazon is looking at Long Island City, but he didn’t say whether it was a finalist. He said winning over Amazon would give an economic boost to the entire state, and joked that he was willing to change his name to “Amazon Cuomo” to lure the company.

An estimated 135,000 or more people live in Long Island City and neighborin­g Sunnyside and Woodside, and the median household there makes about $63,500 a year, a bit higher than the citywide median, according to New York University’s Furman Center housing and urban policy think tank. About 40 percent of people older than 25 in the Long Island City area have a bachelor’s degree or higher, slightly above the citywide rate, the Furman Center’s data shows.

The New York Times reported Monday that Amazon is finalizing deals to locate to Long Island City and the Crystal City section of Arlington, Va., just outside Washington, D.C. The Wall Street Journal, which first reported on the possible plan to split the headquarte­rs between two cities, said Dallas is also still a contender. Both newspapers cited unnamed people familiar with the decisionma­king process.

A spokesman for the Dallas Regional Chamber declined to comment Tuesday.

Long Island City and Crystal City would meet Amazon’s requiremen­ts for a new locale: Both are near metropolit­an areas with more than 1 million people, have nearby internatio­nal airports, direct access to mass transit and have room for the company to expand.

Other locations that were on Amazon’s list of 20 contenders declined to comment or said they haven’t heard from Amazon.

Jay Ash, the economic developmen­t chief in Massachuse­tts, said Tuesday he has had “no recent contact” with Amazon about a headquarte­rs in Boston, but his office is still talking with the company about other opportunit­ies. This year, Amazon unveiled plans for an office expansion in Boston’s Seaport District, promising 2,000 new technology jobs by 2021 in fields including machine learning and robotics.

Amazon has said that it could spend more than $5 billion on the new headquarte­rs over the next 17 years, about matching the size of its current home in Seattle — which has 33 buildings and 23 restaurant­s.

Amazon already employs more than 600,000 people worldwide. That’s expected to increase as it builds more warehouses across the U.S. to keep up with online orders. Amazon recently announced that it would pay all its workers at least $15 an hour, but the employees at its second headquarte­rs will be paid a lot more — an average of more than $100,000 per year.

This month, Bezos said during an on-stage interview in New York that the final decision will come down to intuition.

“You immerse yourself in that data, but then you make that decision with your heart,” he said.

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