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Prominent New Yorkers Are Trying To Get Amazon To Bring Back HQ2 (cnet.com) 275

The New York Times reported Thursday that an open letter will be published in the Times on Friday that asks Amazon to reconsider its decision to walk away from its plan to build a 25,000-employee campus in Long Island City, Queens. The company pulled the plug on the project, dubbed HQ2, following vocal and persistent opposition to the plan after it was announced three months ago. CNET reports: The letter was signed by the CEOs of Mastercard, Warby Parker, Goldman Sachs, Tishman Speyer and Jetblue, among others. The presidents of the Building & Construction Trades Council of Greater New York and state AFL-CIO, which were expecting thousands of construction jobs to come from the project, also signed, as did U.S. Reps. Hakeem Jeffries and Carolyn Maloney. "We know the public debate that followed the announcement of the Long Island City project was rough and not very welcoming," the letter stated. "Opinions are strong in New York -- sometimes strident. We consider it part of the New York charm! But when we commit to a project as important as this, we figure out how to get it done in a way that works for everyone."

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has also had several conversations with Amazon, including CEO Jeff Bezos, about bringing back the project, the Times said. The letter and Cuomo's behind-the-scenes efforts are part of the latest fallout since Amazon abandoned HQ2 in New York. The opposition has celebrated the exit as a victory for grassroots campaigns and a stand against lavish government incentives for new development plans. Amazon was slated to get about $3 billion in tax breaks for building the project. Supporters, who weren't as vocal during the run-up to Amazon leaving, expressed shock and consternation about Amazon's decision and worried that New York would appear unfriendly to new businesses. While the business community was broadly seen as in favor of the project, the letter shows how both the camps supporting and opposing HQ2 included unions and Democratic U.S. congress members.

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Prominent New Yorkers Are Trying To Get Amazon To Bring Back HQ2

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 28, 2019 @11:55PM (#58197746)

    That location is too unstable and the cost of doing business is too stupid.

    Get rid of occasional cortex and amazon might think about it again.

  • money-mouth (Score:5, Interesting)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @12:03AM (#58197786) Journal

    Is there any evidence that any of these big subsidy deals to bring companies, sport franchises, etc have ever worked out to the benefit of the population of the municipality?

    • Re:money-mouth (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @12:32AM (#58197876)

      Is there any evidence that any of these big subsidy deals to bring companies, sport franchises, etc have ever worked out to the benefit of the population of the municipality?

      It is hard to say because each scheme is different, and you can't roll the experiment forward and then roll it back and try it again without the subsidy. Reality only has one timeline.

      But we can say that on average they are a net loss. Amazon was going to expand no matter what. Without the subsidy they would have chosen the location based on the best business efficiency. So all the subsidy did was pay to pull the potential HQ from one city to another.

      These subsidies are a Prisoner's Dilemma [wikipedia.org]. Each city feels compelled to offer subsidies because the other cities are doing the same. But they would be collectively better off if none of them did so.

    • Re:money-mouth (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @12:35AM (#58197884)

      Here in Finland I can cite quite a few off the top of my head. For example, pretty much all of the large nickel etc smelters we have in small regions in Lapland. They're literally the main reason some small townships exist any more.

      Same goes for things like huge cellulose and carton factories also typically located in a small township willing to give a lot more of subsidies and tax breaks than large city. And in return, the company tends to pay a huge share of local tax income, as well as employ people. One needs not look beyond what happens to towns that have such a factory go broke and/or leave to understand the impact and importance of inviting and keeping industry.

      • Re:money-mouth (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @02:19AM (#58198082)

        The subsidies have to come from somewhere. If you tax the town residents 10% of their income to subsidize the nickel smelter, that is equivalent to giving the smelter NO subsidy, and them just paying their workers 10% less, and then those workers will have 10% less to spend on other goods and services in the town.

        The result is the same, except without the overhead and inefficiency of the government collecting the taxes and paying the subsidies.

        Without the subsidies, it would also be easier for other business to locate in the town and offer alternative jobs that didn't require a subsidy. A big problem with subsidies, is that once they are in place, they come to be seen as entitlements, and are politically difficult to turn off.

        • Without the subsidies, the businesses just clump together and nobody benefits but the already-rich. Other businesses don't relocate to town. You analogy is false. I love how you sentence small towns to death and then offer nothing but "learn to code" to the victims. Funny, when we did that to members of your tribe who got laid off, it was hate speech. Awfully flexible, that definition.
          • Re:money-mouth (Score:4, Insightful)

            by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @04:23AM (#58198346)

            Without the subsidies, the businesses just clump together and nobody benefits but the already-rich.

            I see. So corporate welfare is actually a way to keep the rich in line. Thanks for clarifying that.

            • That's a deliberate misreading and shameful misrepresentation, you're better than that.
        • by theCoder ( 23772 )

          That's not how subsidies work. They generally do not tax the residents to give the company money (though I suppose they could). Instead, they take the form of "if you move to this area and employ X people at a salary of at least Y, we'll give you a Z% discount on your taxes". Since these are usually local deals, the taxes are usually property tax related, as that is the only taxes that the local government has power over. States might also chip in, which is where income tax reductions could come into pl

      • Re:money-mouth (Score:5, Interesting)

        by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @02:32AM (#58198110) Journal

        Here in Finland...

        Oh boy.

        pretty much all of the large nickel etc smelters we have in small regions in Lapland. They're literally the main reason some small townships exist any more.

        Yeah see, the difference is that New York is going to exist whether or not Amazon goes there. Queens, NYC is not exactly Lapland.

        Also, subsidies for nickel smelters in Lapland are part of a sensible industrial/economic policy that includes free (or nearly free) education, universal health care, etc etc. Finland is actually a civilized place and would be a wonderful place to live if it wasn't dark for six months of the year.

        The situation is very different in the US. Every time...EVERY TIME...a company promises 10,000 high-paying jobs for an area if they just let them not pay taxes, it really turns out to be 100 high-paying jobs and 9,900 shit jobs and 8000 of those get laid off within three years. The entire thing is nothing but a late-stage capitalist boondoggle.

        And it's not even that the companies coming into US municipalities are allowed to not pay a certain amount of taxes. It's much worse than that. The companies still collect the state taxes from their employees, but then don't have to pass the money onto the state. They literally are allowed to keep the state taxes they withheld from their employees' paychecks as tax-free income. Pure profit. On the backs of the employees. And guess what? Now somebody else has to cover the shortfall.

        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          Lapland is going to exist without smelters too. But just like New York, it's going to have to adapt to being significantly poorer. So the subsidies for New York's crumbling subway for example won't be as affordable, and Lapland municipalities would have to apply for state aid to perform its legally mandated educational functions. As some already do.

          As for the rest, I get the feeling you've bought Sanders' lies about Scandianvian countries being socialist. We have an entire complex interwoven negotiation sys

          • But just like New York, it's going to have to adapt to being significantly poorer

            You think New York is poor?

            • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

              English is my third language, and yet even I know the difference between "poor" and "poorer".

              It takes a zealot to intentionally gaslight a post you're replying to by pretending that they have the same meaning.

          • But just like New York, it's going to have to adapt to being significantly poorer.

            Let's talk about "significantly poorer". The population of Finland is what, about 5.5 million people? The GDP of Finland is about $251 billion (USD). The population of New York City is about 8 million people, and the GDP of New York City is over $1.5 TRILLION (with a "T").

            The city of New York has a GDP that's about the same as the entire country of South Korea, that has over 51 million people.

            You might want to reflect on t

            • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

              You just blatantly gaslighted my other post here:

              https://slashdot.org/comments.... [slashdot.org]

              And now you **"want to talk about" the exact thing you gaslit in a different reply. Hey asshole. Fuck you too. Let's talk about why you gaslight people in such a blatant manner, and then demonstrate clearly that it was intentional by talking about the very thing you tried to just lie about, demonstrating clear understanding of what was said.

        • The companies still collect the state taxes from their employees, but then don't have to pass the money onto the state. They literally are allowed to keep the state taxes they withheld from their employees' paychecks as tax-free income. Pure profit. On the backs of the employees. And guess what? Now somebody else has to cover the shortfall.

          This outright lie invalidated any point you were trying to make. All you proved is you don't understand taxes at all. Income withholding taxes are pass-through taxes, and if the employer knowingly keeps them from the government they are supposed to deposit them towards, people go to jail and companies go under. Income withholding taxes in no way impact a companies' tax liability or credit against a companies tax liability, it's money employees would have paid the state or fed directly but due to volume

          • This outright lie invalidated any point you were trying to make. All you proved is you don't understand taxes at all. Income withholding taxes are pass-through taxes, and if the employer knowingly keeps them from the government they are supposed to deposit them towards, people go to jail and companies go under.

            No, my friend. If you look elsewhere in this thread, I have supplied citations and publications that show that indeed, many companies that get state and local tax subsidies which are structured so t

      • Here's the thing. A certain level of civil services requires a certain level of taxation. Doesn't matter if you're a liberal and that level is high, or if you're a conservative and that level is low. What matters is that there is a certainly level of services that you've decided is optimal, and enough taxes have to be collected to sustain that level.

        If you believe your city is at the correct, optimal level of taxes and services, then all residents and businesses should be contributing equally to maint
        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          That is the communist model of "everyone should have equal outcomes regardless of merit". It simply doesn't work in real life because no two individuals are the same. And businesses ultimately are made out of individuals.

          For example, here in Finland the solution to this problem is to have high progressive income taxes, low business taxes, and then have state government, local government, workers' union and employers' union all interlinked in complex network of negotiations over everything from salaries and

    • In the US, I think there was one example of a sports stadium deal working out. Like, literally one. The rest promise economic effects that never materialize and have huge cost overruns.

  • Yup, if there's one thing you can count on from them, it's compromise [reddit.com].

  • They can come back (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @12:16AM (#58197822)
    they just have to pay their taxes, same as everybody else. Also, they're not going to be getting that helipad or the $500 million in grants. Anymore than I would if I was setting up shop there.

    No more economic terrorism. No more race to the bottom. Time to stop letting these companies bully us. We're the God Damned US of A. We're better than that.
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Of course thing to keep in mind, why did Amazon really abandon that site. Recent weather patterns indicate that climate change and sea level rise could have some alarming early outcomes and that site is problematic in that regard and really should be considered an unwise long term investment considering the life of the structure. Underwater front investment at this time is pretty unwise gamble.

      • Businesses don't think that far ahead.

        It's "money now, mitigation later." That pattern is ubiquitous. We see it regarding cybersecurity, pollution, fraud, data whoring ...

    • >No more economic terrorism

      What? You are a bloody demo-moron

    • Have you bothered to look at what incentives are available to everybody else? Some pretty sweet deals are available to businesses [ny.gov]. Amazon was bigger than most but if you want to start a company in New York they'll be more than happy to help.
  • Amazon is already decreasing its footprint in Seattle, even after the City repealed certain taxes in negotiations to their benefit. Theyâ(TM)re an awful player in any community, as is any company refusing to pay their fair share in taxes.
  • The reality is it probably creates more de facto inflation for the average local working stiff, having so much tech and finance there. While all these CEOs would like it as it only has a positive impact for them, really who else's life would it improve? And on the other hand, creating more localized inflation, it would likely harm many more. "The middle children of history." [goodreads.com]

    I suspect it's this kind of obliviousness to the average person's life challenges that got Trump, and AOC [wikipedia.org], elected.

  • New York charm? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by misnohmer ( 1636461 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @04:21AM (#58198342)

    Maybe Amazon had their fill of this New York charm they speak of. Why would any company want to establish an HQ somewhere where they'll be constantly attacked, be it by a vocal minority who would rather be uneducated and unemployed than have someone make money on their work. Too many negative sensational headlines and people who don't read past the headline. In the today's age of social outrage, the negative publicity is not worth it for a global company. They'd rather stay out of the headlines and continue to sell to New Yorkers as customers.

  • Nothing like having the Rich make for another way to inflate the already overpriced real estate of the area by gentrification of the residences that will pop up to fill the need of the jobs.
    Too bad most of those jobs will be people moving into the area for them and not locals...
    Maybe they'll have shops and other support for the campus that will completely lock out the actual locals, and be exclusive to the Amazon Culture.

  • by AHuxley ( 892839 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @09:24AM (#58198922) Journal
    No need to meet with and acquiesce to workers demands.
    No having to meet community leaders.
    No demands to hire random people from the local area.
    Better parts of the USA exist without the demands.
    Shop around and find a great state.
  • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @09:39AM (#58198972) Journal
    ... when you demonize people and drive them away, they leave.
  • It's amusing to watch the democrats eat their own.
  • The feudalism that existed in medieval times, is back in full force.

    You have the king (the state nowadays) who controls lords through allegiance. In turn the lords own and control the land (we call them megacorporations today), and serfs who are tied to the land, and work it and the lord (we call them employees now).

    The serfs work the land and produce goods, and pay the lord, who in turn takes their toil, lines up his coffers and lives lavishly, and pays the king from the work of others. The serfs live in p

    • I’m no expert but today’s situation reminds me more of pre-feudal civilisations, where a king (sometimes, principally considered as unifying war leader) was elected (sometimes, for a short term) by the elite from the elite (so that’s more like the president today, rather than the state); the elite being composed of rival chieftains who (like today’s billionaire investors manipulating mega-corporations) effectively owned a piece of territory and pretty much everything on it (including

  • go fuck himself. It's a horrible investment on NY's part. And Amazon was never interested in creating 2 HQs. Why because there wasn't any obstacle.

    You had too many prominent politicians bending over and taking it up the ass for Amazon. No Amazon got what it wanted and moved on. There were no real plans to build here.
  • by Picodon ( 4937267 ) on Friday March 01, 2019 @04:51PM (#58201478)

    New Yorkers do not want to give up on...

    A clear majority of New Yorkers support this project...

    Looking at the signatories of the open letter [nyt.com], I can’t help getting the feeling that what they meant by “New Yorkers” is, rather, “New Yorkers that matter”. You know, the ones who own stuff like real estate and businesses.

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