The Palm Beach Post

Emails: LGBT law kept firm out of Charlotte

Company ultimately chose Richmond, Va., for facility, 730 jobs.

-

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Internal emails show that city and state officials blame a North Carolina law limiting LGBT protection­s for a company’s decision to pick another state for a new project that includes 700 jobs.

The Charlotte Observer reports that emails obtained through public records requests show that the law known as HB2 was cited as a key factor in CoStar Group’s decision not to put its hub in Charlotte.

One email to city officials says the real estate research firm’s CEO received pushback from his board over HB2 when they were deciding where to create a base for real-estate research operations. The company ultimately chose Richmond, Va., for the facility that will employ about 730 people.

Jeff Edge, a Charlotte Chamber of Commerce official who was recruiting the company, wrote that CoStar’s CEO was “broadsided with their pushback over the HB2 issue in Charlotte” when the CEO sought approval from his board to do final negotiatio­ns.

Edge says in the Sept. 20 email to a city economic developmen­t official that CoStar was rethinking Charlotte “due to all of the press and chatter over HB2 in the past week.”

The email was written not long after the NCAA and Atlantic Coast Conference moved sporting events out of the state because of the law.

A spokeswoma­n for CoStar said Friday that company offi- cials wouldn’t comment on what role HB2 played in their decision.

Costar’s decision to build its hub in downtown Richmond was announced on Oct. 24 by Virginia’s governor. The company headquarte­red in Washington, D.C., is known for its Apartments.com website.

An Oct. 25 email from a North Carolina economic developmen­t official makes an apparent reference to HB2. The email was to state officials from Garrett Wyckoff, senior manager of business recruitmen­t for the Economic Developmen­t Partnershi­p of North Carolina.

“It is my understand­ing that we lost the project. I have selected the following reason for this status change: Local issues,” Wyckoff wrote in the email obtained by the Observer. For further explanatio­n, Wyckoff added: “Spring 2016 Legislatio­n,” a reference to when HB2 was passed.

Wyckoff said in an email that he couldn’t comment. Edge didn’t respond to a phone message seeking comment Friday.

H B 2 , e n a c t e d i n M a r c h , requires transgende­r people to use restrooms correspond­ing with the sex on their birth certificat­e in many public buildings. It also excludes sexual orientatio­n and gender identity from statewide antidiscri­mination protection­s.

Other large companies including Deutsche Bank and PayPal said publicly they chose not to bring more jobs to North Carolina because of the law. Scores of other companies have signed a letter seeking its repeal or joined a legal filing asking a judge to rule against it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States