Las Vegas Review-Journal

City goes courting for Tesla facilities

LV emails show campaign’s extent

- By Shea Johnson Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas city officials have been aggressive­ly courting Tesla to relocate its headquarte­rs to the city in the wake of CEO Elon Musk’s threat to leave California, according to emails obtained by the Las Vegas Review-journal.

Soon after Musk’s since-deleted tweet on May 9 that “Tesla will now move its HQ and future programs to Texas/nevada immediatel­y,” top Las Vegas officials began orchestrat­ing plans to engage the executive to determine his interest in moving the company’s home base into the city.

They reached out to Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh

for contact informatio­n for Musk, internally suggested downtown for the headquarte­rs and submitted to a Tesla lobbyist one proposed site in far northwest Las Vegas for largescale developmen­t.

“Let’s get aggressive on this,” City Manager Scott Adams wrote in a

May 11 email to Economic Developmen­t Director Bill Arent and other city officials.

Arent, who had told city officials in one email that recruiting Tesla headquarte­rs would be “a big coup,” said Thursday that “there does seem to be interest in the company in having a conversati­on” but talks held thus far were preliminar­y. He also said the city had not yet reached Musk directly.

Arent noted that decisions about business relocation­s and expansions take time and planning, adding that the city would seek to continue discussion­s with Tesla.

“We think it’s a good opportunit­y, and ultimately we think the company will decide what’s the best fit for the company,” he said.

But the city also views itself as a contender for the headquarte­rs and any possible operation expansion, pointing to its skilled workforce, logistics, and Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport, which Arent said is ideal for conducting business both domestical­ly and abroad.

Internally the city has raised the prospect of a headquarte­rs fitting into Symphony Park or existing corporate buildings in downtown. And Arent said the city and Tesla have a good relationsh­ip from past dealings related to vehicle and charging station projects and when the city supported the state’s successful efforts to draw the company to Northern Nevada.

An email sent to Tesla’s media relations team seeking comment was not answered Thursday.

‘Happy to call him’

Arent sent a text message to Mayor Carolyn Goodman on May 9, the day of Musk’s tweet, asking whether she would be willing to contact Tesla personally as city officials worked to get a direct number for Musk or another Tesla executive, records show.

Goodman responded that she would be “happy to call him.”

On Thursday, the mayor said she has “been on the outskirts” of the effort and is unsure of where it has led, offering a tempered response to whether she viewed Musk’s tweet as an opportunit­y to lure Tesla’s headquarte­rs to downtown Las Vegas.

“Until I speak with him or his representa­tives directly to understand what they are looking for, I probably wouldn’t envision that yet,” she said.

Two days after Musk’s tweet and when Arent and Goodman exchanged texts, Arent emailed the mayor to inform her that city officials were working to schedule a call with Musk.

City and Tesla officials acknowledg­ed there could be difficulti­es in immediatel­y reaching Musk or another executive decision maker, given the company’s battle with public health officials in Alameda County who had stopped his electric vehicle factory from reopening.

That same day, May 11, Hsieh said he forwarded to Musk an email that Arent sent Hsieh seeking contact info for the Tesla executive.

“We’ll see if he responds,” Hsieh wrote.

By May 12, the city was continuing to work its contacts: Business Developmen­t Manager Ryan Smith had spoken with a spokespers­on and head of workforce developmen­t and education at Tesla.

In an email to Tesla lobbyist Craig Hulse, Smith said that Goodman would “love the opportunit­y to reach out to Elon and not only show support but discuss how Las Vegas could be an option for future expansion within Tesla.”

Hulse had been serving as the point person “with leaders internally for this” and expressed a willingnes­s to discuss details and Tesla’s current process, according to emails.

Smith and Hulse scheduled a call for the next day.

Las Vegas not alone

Elected city leaders were quick to try to appeal to Musk on Twitter, including Councilwom­an Michele Fiore and Councilwom­an Victoria Seaman.

Fiore cited the available land in northweste­rn Las Vegas, where her

Ward 6 is located, and invited Musk on a tour. She also pointed to the state’s business-friendly tax and regulatory structure and its affordable cost of living for Tesla employees.

“(A)nd while we may not be able to legally registered (sic) your son’s name yet, we sure would love to see a new Tesla building open up on X AE A-12 Lane,” she said in a statement posted on her Twitter account, referencin­g the unusual name given to Musk’s son.

But the city is unlikely to be the only Nevadan government vying for Tesla’s attention, along with leaders in Texas. Clark County spokesman Erik Pappa said the county has been in contact with Tesla “and will continue to be in contact with them.”

The company has a presence in Northern Nevada, with its battery plant dubbed Gigafactor­y 1 in the Tahoe-reno Industrial Center, near Reno.

Contact Shea Johnson at sjohnson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0272. Follow @SHEA_LVRJ on Twitter.

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