Daily Camera (Boulder)

Medtronic may still get tax incentives,

- By Lucas High

In August 2019, the Colorado Economic Developmen­t Commission approved a performanc­ebased tax incentive package worth $24.8 million for a mysterious Fortune 500 biotech company known then only as “Project Charlie Brown” that wanted to build a large-scale operation in Boulder County.

The mystery company, it would soon be discovered, was medicaldev­ice maker Medtronic Inc., and the project it wanted to build was a new corporate campus in Louisville.

Fast-forward to October 2020, and that project looks quite a bit different. Louisville, which saw residents and elected officials oppose the overall developmen­t plan that would have included the Medtronic campus, is out, and nearby Lafayette has stepped in as the new suitor for the project.

So what happens to the nearly $25 million in tax incentives already approved for the Louisville project? According to the Colorado Office of Economic Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Trade, Medtronic likely can still take advantage of the package.

“OEDIT received notice from Medtronic that it is pursuing an alternativ­e project location in Lafayette,” Office of Economic Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Trade communicat­ions manager Jill Mcgranahan told Bizwest in an email. “The EDC has historical­ly allowed a award to move forward if the correspond­ing project jobs meet the of the ultimate county in which the project commences (in this instance, the same county).”

Last year, when Medtronic was approved for incentives, the company told the EDC that the roughly 1,000 new jobs that will be housed in Boulder County would pay an average annual wage of almost $137,000. That’s well above the county’s annual average wage. The median household income in Boulder County is roughly $84,000. Medtronic is eyeing a roughly 42-acre parcel just south of the Good Samaritan Medical Center in Lafayette, northeast of the interchang­e of Northwest

Parkway and U.S. Highway 287 to develop the nearly 600,000-squarefoot complex.

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 ?? Jeremy Papasso / File photo ?? In June, the Louisville City Council postponed a vote on the planned Redtail Ridge developmen­t on 400 acres that formerly housed the Storage Technology Corp. headquarte­rs. Medtronic Inc.’s new corporate campus would have been part of the Redtail Ridge project, but a snag has caused the business to look at Lafayette as a new place to build.
Jeremy Papasso / File photo In June, the Louisville City Council postponed a vote on the planned Redtail Ridge developmen­t on 400 acres that formerly housed the Storage Technology Corp. headquarte­rs. Medtronic Inc.’s new corporate campus would have been part of the Redtail Ridge project, but a snag has caused the business to look at Lafayette as a new place to build.

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