USA TODAY International Edition

NYC, DC area win Amazon’s approval

Company extends its footprint with HQ2 decision

- Elizabeth Weise and Mike Snider

WASHINGTON – Amazon named New York City and the Washington suburb of Arlington, Va., as the areas that will divvy up 50,000 high-paying jobs the online retail giant is likely to bring.

Tuesday’s announceme­nt came after 24 months of intense jockeying by more than 230 cities vying to become the home of Amazon’s second headquarte­rs.

Amazon’s request for proposals listed multiple requiremen­ts, including tax incentives and a business-friendly environmen­t. The Seattle-based company aims to hire the best and the brightest talent to keep up its ferocious pace of innovation, even as other tech companies compete to hire those same workers.

New York City and the greater D.C. area fit that bill admirably, said Jeffrey Shulman, a professor at the University of Washington’s school of business who studies Amazon’s effect on Seattle.

“Both of those cities are attractive

“People who want to work at Amazon will now have three cities to choose from.”

Jeffrey Shulman, University of Washington

places to live where they have both a talent pool and the cultural amenities that make someone willing to uproot their lives and move there,” he said. “People who want to work at Amazon will now have three cities to choose from rather than one or two.”

D.C. the front-runner

The Washington metro area landed three spots among the 20 finalists when the company narrowed its list of candidate sites in January: Montgomery County, Maryland; Northern Virginia (Loudoun County and Fairfax County); and Washington itself.

The area’s public transporta­tion system and its white-collar, well-educated workforce are strengths. Its location in the Eastern time zone makes it good for staying in touch with subsidiari­es across the Atlantic. Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who owns The Washington Post, purchased a $23 million mansion in the area, the largest private residence in the nation’s capital.

“Then you put Bezos having a house here and owning The Post and increasing­ly needing to influence federal policy, this isn’t a bad place to be,” said economist Stephen Fuller, a professor of public policy and regional developmen­t and director of the Fuller Institute at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia.

Northern Virginia, a crossroads of the internet, has many data centers where tech giants such as Facebook, Google and Salesforce connect. Amazon Web Services has 29 individual data centers in Northern Virginia. According to Loudoun County, where most of the data centers are, 70 percent of global internet traffic flows through it.

The case for New York

The New York Metro area has almost 1.3 million workers in the relevant fields of management, business, finance, math, public relations and sales.

New York is a magnet for young profession­als who prize urban areas, rich culture and vibrant art scenes. It has a massive, if somewhat beleaguere­d, transit system.

It’s a large enough city that adding 25,000 highly paid workers won’t seriously distort the job market in the ways it might have in smaller cities.

Though housing in New York City is tight, Long Island City at the western edge of the borough of Queens has been on an apartment building spree. A total of 41 apartment buildings have been built in the area over the past eight years, with 12,533 apartments by 2017, according to RentCafe.

The search process

The search began Sept. 7, 2017, when Amazon announced it was looking for a second headquarte­rs, one that would be co-equal to its Seattle home. It posted a request for proposals outlining what informatio­n and attributes it looked for.

These searches are usually done in secrecy and announced only after a site has been chosen. Amazon instead made its requiremen­ts public and let the offers roll in.

The prospect of investment and bragging rights from securing the world’s most valuable company pitted tiny cities against metropolis­es, each striving to convince the company it had the right workers, transporta­tion, culture and tax breaks. It was an effort built for the age of social media, when everything takes place in public and there is constant jockeying for top billing.

In the end, 238 cities sent in proposals by the deadline of Oct. 19, 2017.

On Jan. 18, a short list of 20 finalists was announced. The cities and areas were Atlanta; Austin, Texas; Boston; Chicago; Columbus, Ohio; Dallas; Denver; Indianapol­is; Los Angeles; Miami; Montgomery County, Maryland; Nashville, Tennessee; Newark, New Jersey; New York City; Northern Virginia; Philadelph­ia; Pittsburgh; Raleigh, North Carolina; Toronto; and Washington.

The winners can expect a few things to happen right away. First, big parties held by city officials. Then a land rush.

Amazon staff won’t start showing up for months, if not years, but speculator­s, developers and those expecting to ride a significant rise in housing prices in both areas will arrive quickly. This is likely to be more pronounced in Northern Virginia simply because its real estate market isn’t as white-hot as New York’s is.

 ?? SOURCE Amazon, USA TODAY Research GEORGE PETRAS, KARL GELLES/USA TODAY ??
SOURCE Amazon, USA TODAY Research GEORGE PETRAS, KARL GELLES/USA TODAY
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States