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News That You Can Use When You Do Business
in the American South
January
Maryland Becomes First State to Lose Power to Enforce
Clean Air Laws
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has taken over the
state of Maryland's power to enforce federal clean air laws.
According to the EPA, Maryland failed to comply with an order
to allow greater public participation in industrial permitting
processes. Maryland did not meet a December 1, 2001, deadline
for not advancing environmental policies aimed at reducing
air and water pollution. The state could lose up to $7 million
in federal funds it recieves to direct the program. In addition,
the EPA's office in Philadelphia will now handle industry
requests for new industrial permits.
Nissan Official Warns Mississippi About Another Auto Plant
On December 13, 2001, Jim Morton, Nissan North America's
senior vice president for finance and administration, sent
a letter to Mississippi Gov. Ronnie Musgrove expressing "great
concern" if another auto manufacturer located in the
central Mississippi area. In the letter, Morton wrote that
another automotive plant locating within 80 miles of Nissan's
plant, which is under construction in Canton, Miss., could
endanger any future expansions of the yet-to-be-completed
facility. Morton did not mention a competing automaker, but
the letter was received by Musgrove's office mere days before
he left on a recruiting mission to South Korea to speak to
officials with Hyundai. Hyundai, it has been widely reported,
is expected to choose from among a handful of Southern states
for a $1 billion plant that would employ 2,000 workers. Musgrove
has said publicly that he would not limit sites in any part
of the state to any company looking to land in Mississippi.
Canton Gains More Suppliers for Nissan
Additional production suppliers for Nissan North America
will bring more than $110 million in investment to Canton,
Miss. and create about 1,000 new jobs. These suppliers include
four new production plants, a supplier logistics center and
a transportation center. M-TEK Inc. will build a new plant
in the Central Mississippi Industrial Center to supply Nissan
with interior trim components. The 219,000 square foot plant
in Madison County will be known as M-Tek Mississippi, Inc.
TKA Fabco has been awarded a significant amount of body stampings
and assemblies to supply the Nissan plant. They are determining
a suitable location for their facility. Unipres U.S.A. Inc.
will supply body stampings for Nissan vehicles built in Canton.
Unipres will build a 150,000 square foot plant in Forest.
Yorozu America, Inc. will build a facility in the Ceres Industrial
Park in Vicksburg. Yorozu will supply various suspension components
from its 80,000 square foot plant. To support the logistics
requirements of the Canton plant, a new supplier logistics
center will be built on the Nissan site in Madison County
by a joint venture that will own and operate the facility.
The majority owner will be a Mississippi-based, minority-owned
company. The 200,000 square foot supplier logistics center
represents a capital investment of $15 million. When fully
staffed the center will employ 250 people.
FAA Issues Record of Decision Paving Way for FedEx in
Triad
Since 1998, when FedEx officials announced a $300 million,
750-employee air freight hub at the Piedmont Triad International
Airport in Greensboro, N.C, economic development officials
in the Triad region have waited patiently to tout their market
as the South's newest distribution center. On December 31,
2001, officials in the Greensboro and Winston-Salem region
got word from the FAA that a third runway at the Piedmont
Triad International Airport has been approved, paving the
way for the FedEx hub. The Record of Decision by the FAA makes
the airport improvements eligible for federal financial assistance
and commits the airport to specific conditions, including
strict environmental regulations. Officials with Forward Greensboro
have come up with a marketing plan to tout the area's potential
as a transportation hub. Marketing packages are being sent
to site consultants that include a copy of the movie "Planes,
Trains and Automobiles" under a jacket that reads "The
Challenge of Getting from Point A to Point B is only funny
in the movies."
New Spa City Xerox Plant Adds 290 Workers
Xerox Corp. has expanded its operation in Hot Springs, Ark.,
with a new 51,000 square foot e-services facility. The $4
million building will provide imaging, digital storage and
retrieval services for customers such as Dow Chemical, Enterprise
Rent-A-Car and McGraw Hill. The company has had an e-services
facility in Hot Springs since 1987 that employed 85. The new
center will employ 375 people, making Xerox one of the larger
employers in the area.
Tampa Bay No. 1 in Job Growth
The U.S. Department of Labor's December Jobs Report ranked
Tampa Bay as the No. 1 market in the U.S. in job growth this
past quarter. Following the Tampa-St. Pete-Clearwater MSA
are six other Southern markets including three other Florida
markets placing in the top 10. West Palm Beach-Boca Raton
ranked third, followed by Orlando at No. 4 and Jacksonville
at No. 10. Tampa Bay's unemployment rate stood at 3.7 percent
in October compared to 5.4 percent nationally. Tampa Bay was
named the South's No. 1 major market in 1998 and 1999 by Southern
Business & Development.
Fastest Growing Job Markets
1. Tampa-St. Pete-Clearwater, Fla
2. Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, Ark.
3. West Palm Beach-Boca Raton, Fla.
4. Orlando, Fla.
5. Rochester, Minn.
6. Laredo, Tex.
7. Northern Virginia
8. Sheboygan, Wis.
9. Madison, Wis.
10. Jacksonville, Fla.
Source: U.S. Department of Labor's December report
AMD Narrows Search
Officials with Advanced Micro Devices have developed their
short list for a $3 billion, next-generation, 300mm chip plant.
The company has narrowed its search to sites in South Austin,
Tex. to San Marcos on the I-35 corridor. It has been reported
that AMD is also looking at international sites for the 1,500-employee
plant, which is expected to be operational by 2004 or 2005.
In September, AMD announced it planned to close its two oldest
plants in Austin, Fabs 14 and 15. It continues to operate
Fab 25 in South Austin. The Staubach Company is directing
the search for AMD.
Missouri Approves Rail Improvement Plan and $500 Million
Bond Proposal For Highways, Bridges
The Missouri Department of Transportation approved a plan
in December that allows the Kansas City Terminal Railway to
spend $120 million to ease rail traffic on Kansas City's west
side. In an unrelated story, the Missouri Highways and Transportation
Commission authorized a $500 million bond-financing proposal
that will be used to pay for the construction of highways
and bridges in 2003. The proposal would give the commission
the authority to issue bonds up to the maximum allowed by
law, which is $500 million. As reported in this edition's
"Around the South," The Road Information Program,
or TRIP, cited Missouri as the state with the third-worst
roads in the U.S. The report said that only Massachusetts
and California has worse roads than Missouri.
December
Georgia has Best Roads, Followed by Alabama
The Road Information Program (TRIP), put out a report in
December that ranked states' road systems from best to worst.
TRIP's road condition evaluations are based on data from 2000
released by the Federal Highway Administration. According
to the report, Georgia has the best roads in the country,
followed by Alabama, Wyoming, Florida and Kansas, meaning
four of the top five states cited for great roads are states
in the American South. The state with the worst roads to drive:
According to TRIP's report, that would be California, followed
by Massachusetts, Missouri, Connecticut and Louisiana, meaning
two of the five worst road systems are in the South.
Whoa, Good Buddy. Truckers Say Tennessee has the Best
Roads
In its annual survey of truck drivers, Overdrive magazine
reports that Tennessee's highway system is the best in the
nation. The survey places Tennessee ahead of Florida, Ohio,
Texas and Indiana. According to truck drivers who responded
to the survey, the nation's worst roads are in Pennsylvania,
New York, Illinois, Arkansas and Louisiana. NOTE: Former Tennessee
Gov. Ned Ray McWherter, one of the South's most respected
economic development governors over the last 15 years, made
improving the state's road system a major priority. You can
read more information about transportation issues in the South
by turning to the "Transportation" section in this
edition.
FiberCore Opens First U.S. Plant in Auburn
FiberCore Inc., a Charlton Mass.-based manufacturer of optical
telecommunications fiber and components will build a $30 million
factory in Auburn, Alabama. The plant, which is expected to
open in 2004, will be the first U.S.-based plant for FiberCore,
which has factories in Germany and Brazil.
Tampa Wins Large Job-Generator with Merck-Medco
Merck-Medco Rx Services of Florida, opened its first Merck-Medco
in Tampa, a processing, dispensing and consulting home-delivery
pharmacy, in 1987. In 1989, the company opened a second home
delivery pharmacy and warehouse, also in Tampa. Between these
two locations, Merck-Medco currently employs 1,500 workers.
The company recently announced that it will open a new 1,000-employee
call center in Tampa. This is Tampa's largest job announcement
in two years. It is an unusual call center because this center
will be certified as a pharmacy. About 700 of the employees
will be customer service representatives, but the work force
will also include as many as 100 pharmacists and several hundred
administrative workers. At full capacity in 2003, the center
will handle more than 200,000 patient inquiries a week.
Capital One to Expand in Tampa
Capital One has expanded its Tampa call center and plans
for more growth. Since July 1, the company has added more
than 100 new jobs at the 71-acre campus, and plans to add
1,000 more workers during the next six years. The new employees
will handle calls from customers of Capital One's auto finance
business.
Thomaston Gains 500 Jobs with Two New Companies
Two companies will locate in Thomaston, Ga. and create more
than 500 jobs in the next 24 months. Six months ago Thomaston
was hit hard when Thomaston Mills announced it was closing
after more than 100 years in business. Standard Textile Co.,
a Cincinnati, Ohio-based manufacturer of health care, hospitality,
and institutional textile products, will establish manufacturing
operations at the former Thomaston Mills Peerless Division
and traffic and roll warehouse, totaling almost 700,000 square
feet. The company will employ 200 people. 1888 Mills will
purchase the former Thomaston Mills Finishing Division, a
facility of 542,000 square feet. 1888 is a specialty towel
and textile products manufacturer based in Griffen, Georgia.
The company will employ 300 workers.
Glass Manufacturer Opens Plant in Sparta, Ga.
Saint Gobain Desjonqueres, a high-end cosmetic and perfume
bottle manufacturer, will open a plant in Sparta,Ga. and create
200 jobs. The international company manufactures glass for
the insulation and building materials industries. The Sparta
plant will be used to decorate cosmetic and perfume bottles
for clients such as Estee Lauder and Ralph Lauren. The company
currently operates six plants in Georgia with over 1,000 employees.
Founded in 1665, Saint Gobain has been crafting glass for
more than 300 years.
Billy Graham Bringing 600 Jobs to Charlotte
Evangelist Billy Graham is moving to his headquarters to
Charlotte, his hometown. The Minneapolis-based Billy Graham
Evangelistic Association is relocating to a site at Billy
Graham Parkway. The new 250,000 square foot headquarters will
be a $33 million investment and will employ as many as 700
workers. Functions of the ministry to be moved to Charlotte
include administrative offices, TV, radio and film production
units and distribution and mailing operations. The project
will be built in phases, with the first phase of the development
to use 100,000 square feet.
Here are Four Winners for 2001
Unemployment rates have been rising steadily the past year
in the South. For example, Danville, Va., saw its unemployment
rate rise from 3.2 percent to 9 percent in just the last year.
Rocky Mount, N.C. saw its rise from 6.6 percent to 9.4 percent.
Yet, we found four winners for 2001. Gadsden, Ala., showed
nearly a four-point decrease in unemployment in 2001, from
9.5 percent to 5.8 percent. Cumberland, Md.'s unemployment
rate dropped to 5.9 percent from 8.1 percent at the end of
2001 and Wheeling, W.V. saw similar results going from 4.5
percent unemployment at the beginning of 2001 to 3.5 percent
at the end. Lastly, McAllen, Tex. saw its unemployment rate,
while still high, drop from 13.4 percent to 12 percent from
November 2000 to November 2001.
Arkansas PSC Says Repeal Mandated Deregulation
In December, the Arkansas Public Service Commission told
the General Assembly that continued movement toward deregulation
of the state's electricity market "is not in the public's
best interest." The PSC recommended that the Legislature
either suspend further steps toward deregulation until 2010
or repeal laws mandating deregulation altogether. The commission
conducted a six month investigation on the effects of deregulation
in Arkansas, and concluded that in five of six projections,
an open market would result in higher electric rates, 13.4
percent higher for customers of Entergy, Arkansas' largest
power supplier.
Fort Mill, S.C. Distribution Center to Employ 1000 Workers
Discount clothing retailer Ross Stores will hire up to 1,000
people over the next five years to staff a new 1.26 million
square foot regional distribution center in York County. The
center, which will be completed by May 2002, will include
a 34,000 square foot office complex and will be Ross' third
U.S. distribution center.
Biopure to Invest $120 Million, Create 185 Jobs in Sumter
County, S.C.
Biopharmaceutical company Biopure Corp. is investing up to
$120 million to build a plant in Sumter County. The plant
will be used to support the company's Oxygen Therapeutic products
for use in human and veterinary medicine. The plant will employ
185 workers and will make a drug that will be used to eliminate
or reduce red blood cell transfusions in patients undergoing
elective surgery.
Moratoriums Surface in Florida Bill
A proposed bill before this year's Florida Legislature seeks
to tie water conservation with real estate development. House
Bill 569, co-sponsored by state Reps. Johnnie Byrd and David
Russell, would require local governments to set plans for
long term availability of water supplies for approved land
development. The bill is similar to one sponsored by Byrd
last year that would have tied real estate development decisions
to water supply, including placing a moratorium on development
during drought conditions. That bill did not reach the House
floor by the time last year's session ended. For more information
on House Bill 569, go to www.leg.state.fl.us.
Ford to Build Parts Center in Fort Worth
Ford Motor Co. will build a 225,000 square foot regional
parts distribution center at the Alliance Airport industrial
park in Fort Worth. The facility will distribute parts to
Ford Lincoln Mercury dealerships within a 250-mile radius
and employ 50 workers.
BAE Systems to Open Facility, Create 1,000 Jobs in Reston,
Va.
BAE Systems North America, the British defense and aerospace
contractor, will open a new systems-integration unit in Reston
in fall 2002 and add 1,000 new jobs at the facility over three
years. The Reston operation, a new business division for the
Farnborough, England-based company, will be located in a 135,000
square foot office currently under construction.
Ferguson Expands Headquarters in Newport News
Ferguson Enterprises will create 400 new jobs at its current
corporate office in Newport News. Ferguson, the largest plumbing
supply distributor in the U.S. is owned by Wolseley plc, the
world's largest specialist trade distributor of plumbing and
heating products. Ferguson's expansion resulted in the need
for an additional $20.5 million facility at the campus in
Newport News.
Atlanta Pulp & Paper Chooses Brunswick County for
Facility
Georgia-based Atlanta Pulp & Paper has located a new
facility in Brunswick County. The company, which has begun
operations in Brunswick County, makes and sells recycled pulp
to paper manufacturers. Brunswick will gain 282 new jobs from
the move.
November
Honda On Roll Again
Honda announced it will create 800 more jobs and spend another
$140 million to increase capacity at its Odyssey minivan plant
in Talladega County, Ala. The announcement came during dedication
ceremonies at the new plant. Two years ago, Honda said it
would hire 1,500 workers and invest $440 million into the
Lincoln, Ala. plant. The expansion will enable Honda to produce
150,000 minivans a year.
Bridgestone Picks Alliance
Bridgestone/Firestone, the largest subsidiary of the world's
largest tire and rubber company, has leased a 608,322 square-foot
build-to-suit in the 15,000-acre AllianceTexas development.
The deal is the largest lease in terms of square footage in
D/FW since 1999. The company chose the Alliance site over
a site north of D/FW in Denton, Tex. The large distribution
facility will be built by Hillwood. Nashville-based Bridgestone/Firestone
is a subsidiary of Japan-based Bridgestone Corporation.
TVA Chairman Wants to Boost Power Capacity, Cut Prices
Glenn McCullough, the Tennessee Valley Authority's new chairman,
said he wants the government utility to improve its power
capacity and environmental performance while paring its debt
and the price of power. McCullough wants to pay down TVA's
$25.5 billion debt, which is among the largest of any utility
in the country; possibly restart Browns Ferry Unit No. 1 and
finish construction of the Bellefonte nuclear power plant
in Alabama; and clean up some of its dirtiest coal plants.
At the same time, he pledged to keep electric rates among
the lowest in the country.
Georgia or Alabama May Get New Nuclear Plant
Although it's been almost 30 years since the government has
licensed a new nuclear power plant, Southern Company may seek
permission to build one in Georgia or Alabama. Southern is
considering applying for a federal license to build a new
plant on the site of one of its existing power plants. The
Atlanta-based utility conglomerate is one of several power
companies considering building nuclear power plants because
of the California energy crisis and a round of pro-nuclear
legislation in Washington, D.C. Soaring fossil fuel prices
and a new political climate in the nation's capital appear
to be reviving the nuclear industry. The 1979 accident at
the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania,
which was a near meltdown, drastically slowed the momentum
of the nuclear industry.
Alabama Governor to Propose Corporate Income Tax Changes
Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman said on Oct. 29 he will propose
corporate income tax changes, but not sales tax increases,
to raise some of the more than $150 million a year he says
the state needs to avoid education spending cuts. He plans
to call state lawmakers into a special session before Christmas
to discuss money raising ideas for the state.
Georgia Automotive Supplier Expands
Gov. Roy Barnes announced on Nov. 2 that HL-A Company, a
Honda part supplier, will expand an existing plant in Bremen
creating 125 new jobs by early next year with an additional
$30.5 million investment by 2004. Over the past five years,
Georgia has attracted five Honda part suppliers bringing more
than 2,100 jobs with a total investment of more than $188
million.
Human Genome Sciences Expands Again in Maryland
Human Genome Sciences, one of the South's largest life sciences
companies, has announced a $100 million expansion of its facilities
in Rockville, Md. The new facility will manufacture commercial
quantities of multiple drugs. The 360,000 square-foot facility
will be completed in 2003. This is the second expansion by
Human Genome this year.
Economic Outlook for Houston Tops Growth in Large Metros
Among the nation's 40 largest regional economies, Houston
will have the highest growth rate in real Gross Area Product
from the second quarter of 2001 through the second quarter
of 2002, according to a forecast prepared by Economy.com,
formerly Regional Financial Associates. The firm expects Houston's
economy to grow 2.20 percent over the period. The forecast
-- a revision of a previous forecast -- is designed to account
for economic changes following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Volkswagen of America to Open New Parts Distribution Facility
in Texas
Volkswagen of America will soon open a new, state-of-the-industry
parts distribution center in Haslet, Tex., that will serve
51 Volkswagen and 23 Audi dealerships in Texas, Arkansas,
Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico and Oklahoma.
The 360,000 square-foot facility will be Volkswagen's largest
parts depot in North America. The distribution center is located
in the AllianceTexas Development, which features an industrial
airport and intermodal rail hub center.
Maryland Surplus Has Pols Giddy
Maryland officials are ecstatic over a large surplus for
fiscal year-end 2001. State Comptroller William Schaefer released
figures that showed a $538 million surplus, with $191 million
actually available after the General Assembly appropriated
$347 million for spending in the current fiscal 2002 budget.
The bulk of the excess tax revenue came from state income
and estate taxes. Sales taxes, on the other hand, came in
21 percent below what Maryland officials were expecting.
Nissan Moving Maxima Line From Japan to Tennessee
Japan's Nissan Motor Company is beginning to transfer manufacturing
operations of its popular Maxima sedan from Japan to its massive
plant in Smyrna, Tenn. The Maxima is being remodeled for a
2003 rollout at the Tennessee facility. In 2000, Nissan announced
a $1 billion expansion of existing plants in Smyrna and Decherd,
Tenn. The Decherd plant makes transaxles and engines. Nissan's
Smyrna plant has produced the Altima sedan and small trucks.
Nissan Workers Vote 2 to 1 Against UAW
Workers at Nissan's automotive plant in Smyrna, Tenn., voted
3,103 to 1,486 against organizing under the United Auto Workers.
The 2 to 1 margin was roughly the same as the failed unionization
vote at the plant in 1989. Nissan produces 400,000 Altima
sedans, Frontier pickup trucks and Xterra sport utility vehicles
at the 5.2 million-square-foot facility. The UAW has repeatedly
attempted to gain a foothold in Smyrna. Since the failed 1989
vote, organizers have unsuccessfully tried to place a unionization
vote before workers on two occasions, but had been unable
to garner enough signatures to prompt a vote. If the UAW vote
had been successful, the Smyrna plant would have become the
first foreign-owned automaker with UAW representation.
Maryland Ranked No. 1 Digital State
The Center for Digital Government's 2001 Digital State Survey
has ranked Maryland as the nation's No. 1 digital state. The
survey showed that Maryland's state government ranked first
in the Electronic Commerce/Business Regulation sector with
a score of 100 percent. The Digital State Survey assesses
the progress state governments have made in using digital
technology to improve the delivery of services to their citizens.
States were judged on the availability of business information,
regulations, forms and online assistance, and the ability
to submit required paperwork and payment using the Internet.
State of Maryland agencies offer citizens opportunities to
conduct business online including driver's license renewal
and vehicle registration, business registration and licensing,
professional license renewals and licenses for hunting and
fishing. In addition, the Comptroller of Maryland was the
first in the nation to provide an online registration system
for business tax accounts.
Southern Governors Seek Help For Textile Job Losses
The governors of Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and South
Carolina sent a letter to President George W. Bush recently
to encourage him to use his authority to address the problems
with the U.S. textile industry. In the letter, the governors
of the nation's four largest textile producing states asked
the President to deal with the textile industry crisis through
the use of existing laws to attack unfair trade practices
and end imports from countries that use child labor. The U.S.
textile industry has lost more than 60,000 jobs in the past
year, including over 25,000 in Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina
and South Carolina alone.
Southeast Top Region for Plant Locations
A survey conducted by the Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI, an
Arlington, Va.-based manufacturing research group, shows that
the Southeastern U.S. is the favored location for new U.S.
manufacturing facilities, with 50% of respondents favoring
the region. The top five factors favoring the Southeast included
labor costs and quality, proximity to customers, government
incentives, transportation infrastructure and regulatory/business
climate.
Alabama Passes Rural Tax Breaks
Many Southern states have developed tax breaks for companies
that locate in distressed counties. But Alabama's new rural
initiatives are breaking the mold. The Alabama House has passed
legislation that gives tax breaks to companies that employ
as few as five people and invest as little as $500,000 to
open or expand an industry, warehouse or research center in
a poor county in the state. The company would have to pay
workers at least $8 an hour to qualify for the tax break.
The business must be located in one of two dozen Alabama counties
with high poverty and joblessness rates. The uniqueness of
the plan is that it is designed to give the very poorest counties
in Alabama an opportunity to attract very small businesses.
Southern Markets Do Well in Economic Study
An annual survey that determines which local U.S. economies
are the best included five Southern markets in its top 10.
The study, conducted by Policom Corp., measures how consistently
each market's economy has grown in size and quality over an
extended period of time. Taken into account were factors such
as per capita income, employment, annual earnings, retail
trade, construction sectors, and welfare benefits. The study
placed emphasis on communities that had slower, more consistent
growth between 1975 and 1999. Markets that had a history of
"boom and bust" were ranked lower in the study.
Austin, Tex., topped the survey for the third year in-a-row.
In addition to Austin, other markets making the top 10 included
Dallas, Atlanta, San Antonio and Raleigh-Durham in the South,
Seattle, Denver, Salt Lake City and Fort Collins, Colo. in
the West and Madison, Wis. in the Midwest.
Tax Incentives Considered in W.V.
West Virginia Gov. Bob Wise's administration is looking to
introduce new tax incentives for locating industry before
the Legislature ends its 2002 session. Wise has not been specific
about his plan, however, business officials in West Virginia
have complained about the state's tax structure and high workers'
compensation rates.
Atlanta Ranked No. 1 in Business Owner Diversity
Atlanta is indeed the land of opportunity according to Demographics
Daily. Atlanta earned 94.44 points on Demographics Daily's
100-point business-diversity index, designed to measure an
area's willingness to extend economic opportunities to all
people, regardless of race or gender. Second place was Miami,
the only metro earning at least 90 points. Rounding out the
top five were Orange County, Ca., San Francisco and Seattle.
The survey was based in part after the release by the U.S.
Census Bureau this year of 1997 statistics on business ownership
by women, blacks, and Hispanics.
Migration to the South
Quick. Which U.S. region has the most people? The title of
this magazine probably tipped you off to that answer. But
do you know just how many people live in the South? How about
44.5 million more than how many live in the West; 51.7 million
more than how many live in the Midwest; and 53.4 million more
than how many live in the Northeast. In fact, with a 2000
Census Bureau count of 54,377,978, the Northeast has just
about half of the South's 107,736,849 residents.
In 1960, the South's percentage of the total U.S. population
was barely 31 percent. Today, it's almost 40 percent. The
following chart outlines the South's remarkable increase in
population from 1960 to 2000.
| |
1960 |
1970 |
1980 |
1990 |
2000 |
| SOUTH |
54,973 |
62,812 |
75,372 |
85,446 |
107,736,849 |
| NORTHEAST |
44,678 |
49,061 |
49,135 |
50,809 |
54,377,978 |
| MIDWEST |
51,619 |
56,589 |
58,866 |
59,669 |
56,027,481 |
| WEST |
28,053 |
34,838 |
43,172 |
52,786 |
63,197,932 |
Source: U.S. Census Bureau
October
Louisville in Compliance
For the first time since 1972, the Louisville area has met
the national smog standard. EPA officials declared the metro
area in compliance with rules for ground-level ozone. Industries
in Louisville have spent over $50 million since 1990 in the
reduction of their emmissions of nitrogen oxides and other
pollutants.
Houston's Five Year Clean Air Plan
The EPA has approved Houston's five-year clean air plan.
The plan, which an EPA official called "the most innovative
and technically advanced clean air plan ever," is expected
to cut nitrogen oxide emissions by 75 percent by 2007. The
clean air plan includes reducing highway speeds in Houston
to 55 mph, stricter tailpipe emissions testing and the banning
of gas-powered lawn equipment during morning hours in the
summer. The plan also calls for major industry in Houston
to to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions by an average of 90
percent by 2007.
Orlando International Named Top Airport by J.D. Power
For the second consecutive year, J.D. Power and Associates
has ranked Orlando International Airport as the No. 1 airport
in North America in its Airport Passenger Satisfaction Study.
The airport received the highest marks in overall passenger
satisfaction within the large airport category, or those airports
that handle 30 million or more passengers annually. J.D. Power
evaluated 42 major North American airports over the summer.
Orlando International received the highest marks for terminal
facilities; gate areas; airline check-in; baggage claim; security
check process; and food, beverage and retail services. The
airport has also received recognition from Consumer Reports
and a four-out-of-four stars from the Wall Street Journal.
Over 12,000 evaulations from travelers were received by the
California-based marketing information services firm.
Massive Jolt to Raleigh-Durham
With the demise of Midway Airlines, shortly after the September
terrorist attacks, went nearly half of the flights out of
Raleigh-Durham International Airport. Midway, based at RDU,
flew 115 flights per day out of the airport. In addition,
other carriers have dropped 15 other flights out of Raleigh-Durham
International since the attacks. Given the dire condition
of the air travel industry, few carriers are expected to fill
the lost flights leaving business, especially those in Research
Triangle Park, in a lurch. In a related story, initial plans
for a $1 billion expansion of the airport have been put on
hold.
Mitsubishi Picks Orlando for Western Hemisphere HQ
Mitsubishi has selected the Orlando area for two major facilities.
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries of America will build a power
systems service and manufacturing center in Orange County
and has chosen Lake Mary in Seminole County for the Western
Hemisphere headquarters for its Power Systems Division. Together,
the two facilities will create nearly 500 jobs in the Orlando
area. Mitsubishi's manufacturing center will be located in
Orlando Central Park. Both projects are a result of the power
plant boom in the South.
Best Buy Opens Distribution Center in Dublin, Ga.
Minneapolis-based Best Buy Co. has opened a $40 million regional
distribution center in Dublin, Ga. The electronics retailer
is hiring 250 employees for the 748,000-square-foot facility.
The new center will supply Best Buy stores in Georgia, Florida,
North Carolina, Alabama and Tennessee.
Millennium Marketing to Add 500 Jobs in Shawnee, Kan.
Telemarketing company Millenninum Marketing has moved to
a new headquarters in Shawnee, Kan. and will add 500 jobs
to its operations by year's end. The company, a national marketer
of magazine subscriptions, recently moved from a 2,000-square-
foot office in Shawnee into a 42,000-square-foot converted
retail space in the Shawnee Shopping Center.
Cox Plans Call Center Near Wichita
Atlanta-based Cox Communications will build a new customer
call center in northeast Wichita, a development that will
bring 150 new jobs during the next three years. The 35,000-square-foot
center in the Comotara Industrial Park is designed to centralize
much of the company's customer service calls in one location.
Automotive Supplier to Locate in Shreveport
Another automotive supplier for GM's expanding automotive
facility in Shreveport is landing in the area. Louisville,
Ky.-based T&WA, a tire and wheel assembly company, is
breaking ground on a 43,000-square-foot facility in the Shreveport
area. The company is expected to employ 27 workers at the
plant, which is scheduled to open in May of next year. GM's
Shreveport plant is currently undergoing an $800 million expansion.
Human Genome Sciences Building $250 Million Campus in
Rockville, Md.
Human Genome Sciences is building a new research and development
and corporate campus in Rockville, Md. The company has broken
ground on the more than $250 million first phase of the project.
When complete, the 55-acre campus will provide more than one
million square feet of office and lab space in interconnected
buildings. Human Genome produces gene-based pharmaceuticals.
Harley-Davidson To Expand Kansas City Plant
Harley-Davidson will hire 300 people over the next few years
as part of its plans to build a new motorcycle at the company's
Kansas City plant. Harley is planning the production of a
new bike called the V-Rod.
Target to Build Large Distribution Center
Target officials have selected a site near Lugoff, S.C. for
a 1.35 million-square-foot distribution facility. Ground was
broken in October for the $85 million project, which is expected
to employ as many as 1,000 workers by 2006. The larger retailer
will serve stores in Georgia, Virginia and the Carolinas from
the facility.
Williams Refining and Marketing to Invest $400 Million
in Memphis
Williams Refining and Marketing, the nation's largest-volume
transporter of natural gas, is investing $400 million in an
expansion of its current Memphis operations. The company plans
three projects in the city which will create a total of 90
jobs. Current employment for Williams in Memphis is 300 people.
The project will include expanding Williams' refinery, building
a power generation facility and constructing a support facility.
Auto Supplier Expands in Dayton
The Lear Corp., a maker of automotive interior products,
is expanding its Dayton, Tenn. plant by 80,000 square feet
and hiring 100 more employees. The company recently secured
new contracts with Ford, Nissan and GM.
Headquarters Moved From California to Dallas/Fort Worth
Kinko's Inc. officials have announced the company is relocating
it headquarters from Ventura, Ca. to the Dallas/Fort Worth
area. Officials with the company have cited costs as the main
factor behind the move. One company official pointed to the
fact that there are no income taxes in Texas and housing and
office space costs less there than in California. Up to 500
jobs are expected to be created when the company relocates.
Officials with Kinko's are searching for approximately 100,000
square feet of space in the Dallas/Fort Worth region.
Aerospace Company Announces Expansion
West Virginia Gov. Bob Wise announced the expansion of FCX
Systems to a new 36,000-square-foot building in the Chaplin
Hill Road Industrial Park, Monongalia County. "FCX has
been an important part of West Virginia's economic family
since 1987," Wise said. "Participating in a company's
success is what economic development is all about." FCX
systems, which designs, manufactures and sells solid state
frequency converters worldwide for commercial aviation, private,
government, corporate and industrial lab applications, employs
67 people and plans to double its workforce within three years
at its new location, with an investment of $2.7 million.
Maryland Department of Planning Intervenes
Maryland Gov. Parris Glendening, the first governor to implement
smart growth policies to limit suburban sprawl, is opposing
three developments in Maryland. The state Department of Planning
is opposing a Wal-Mart near Chestertown, a condominium project
in Annapolis and a residential development in Gaithersburg.
Glendening's administration is opposing the developments to
show that increased density must be accompanied by quality
design. State officials have no power to approve or reject
any of the projects, but are lending their expertise in planning,
design and legal issues on the developments.
State of Maryland Buys Arundel Wetlands
Maryland has purchased 614 acres of wetlands and forests
along the Patuxent River in Anne Arundel County. The $4.3
million acquisition is the first purchase under the state's
new GreenPrint Program aimed at protecting open space and
environmentally sensitive areas and encouraging smart growth.
The land purchase is part of Gov. Parris Glendening's $35
million pet project to secure greenspace in the state. Glendening
is one of the nation's top smart growth advocates.
Hog Farm Restrictions In S.C.
New regulations put into place by the South Carolina Department
of Health and Environmental Control Board have all but ended
the possibility of new hog farms in the state. State officials
have imposed stringent temporary permitting for large hog
farms and plan to implement permanent environmental rules
on factory-style hog farms. The temporary regulations apply
to hog farms that produce 1 million pounds of pork a year
with eight or more barns. The regulations are in response
to public concerns about the farms' effect on air and water
quality in the Palmetto State.
Utility's Mercury Testing Shows Promise
Officials with Atlanta-based Southern Co. said new technology
being used to reduce mercury emissions from coal-fired power
plants is showing promise. The first phase of the testing
was recently completed by ADA-Environmental Solutions at Southern
Co.'s Gaston plant near Wilsonville, Ala. Alabama Power, a
subsidiary of Southern Co., was selected by the U.S. Dept.
of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory to participate
in the nation's first full-scale program to test advanced
mercury control technologies. Results from the test showed
that mercury can be removed at rates between 80 and 85 percent
when activated carbon is injected into the existing baghouse
ash collection system. The high level of mercury control was
achieved in a short test of seven days. Long term testing
would indicate costs and overall performance of the technology.
Subterranean Freight Tunnel Contemplated In Texas
Officials at the Texas Transportation Institute are in the
preliminary design phase of a 6.5-foot-wide, concrete reinforced
tunnel that will be used by train-like vehicles running on
electricity. The underground train conceivably would move
freight at speeds of up to 55 mph. No drivers would be needed
for the trains and fuel costs and weather would not be factors.
The idea would help free up roadways of large trucks, officials
said. Researchers with the Institute said studies over the
next two years will determine if the freight tunnel is cost
effective.
Deregulation Postponed in Oklahoma Until at Least 2003
Gov. Frank Keating signed into law a bill that establishes
a nine-member elected official task force to study the effects
of electric deregulation in Oklahoma. The group's final report
must be presented to the Governor, the Senate Pro Tempore
and the Speaker of the House by December 31, 2002. Until that
time, the implementation of electric restructuring is on hold.
A critical issue for the task force to consider is the transmission
component of electricity. Oklahoma has 18 new power plants
for 3-million people. In comparison, California, which did
not build a single new plant in the 1990s, has 34 million
residents. Oklahoma currently has the eighth lowest electric
power prices in the country.
Louisiana Officials Consider Deregulation Dynamics
Louisiana's Public Service Commission is considering the
effects of deregulation. The PSC maintains limited deregulation,
especially in areas of heavy industry, should be allowed under
strict conditions. Other officials in Louisiana maintain that
deregulating the utility industry statewide is not in the
best interest of the state as a whole. However, PSC chairman
Jimmy Field says limited deregulation may introduce competition
to the wholesale market and could stimulate more reliable
and cheaper service to heavy industry sites.
Texas Launches Pilot Program
Power customers in Texas who signed up for the state's deregulation
pilot program, have begun to switch to new power generators
and suppliers. Texas officials created the pilot program to
give competing utilities several months to test their systems
before statewide deregulation begins on Jan. 1, 2002. Texas
officials are confident full-scale deregulation will go smoothly
at the beginning of the year, when customers of investor-owned
Texas utilities such as Reliant and TXU can switch to competing
generators and suppliers. "We have done all of the testing
and so have our market participants," said Sam Jones,
chief operating officer for the Electric Reliability Council
of Texas. "We just need to get it done and get down the
road."
September
Hyundai Update
Officials of the massive Korean manufacturer aren't talking,
but rumors are flying that Opelika, Ala., is the site for
the company's first North American automotive plant. The size
of the plant, employment and investment have been reported
in several newspapers, including a cover story in the Birmingham
News the first week of September. The plant, rumored to be
similar in size to Nissan's new plant in Canton, Miss., will
enable Hyundai to gain a foot-hold in the U.S. market. Sales
of Hyundai automotive products have increased in the U.S.
in recent years, after experiencing problems with quality
when the products were introduced initially in this country.
Charlotte Wins Out
SPX Corp., a Michigan-based technical products and systems
company, announced it will build a 100,000-square-foot headquarters
office in Charlotte. Fairfax County, Va., was also in the
running for the facility. The company will employ at least
50 when it begins operations in the spring of next year.
Maryland, Virginia Jobless Rate Bucks National Trend
While the national jobless rate sped toward the five percent
mark, Maryland officials proudly announced that their state's
unemployment rate actually dropped in August to 3.7 percent.
Even better, Virginia's jobless rate dropped to 2.9 percent.
That's down from 3.2 percent in July. What's impressive about
Maryland and Virginia's low unemployment rates this summer
centers around the two state's large concentration of high-tech
industries. High-tech dead? Not in Virginia and Maryland!
VeriSign Expands in Northern Virginia
Who says tech is dead? VeriSign plans to expand in Herndon,
Va., by leasing an entire 405,000 square-foot office facility
in Woodland Park. The new 13-story office building, named
Waterview I, is close to completion. The new facility can
accommodate up to 1,600 employees.
Nestle Breaks Ground in Arkansas
Nestle USA has begun construction on its $165 million frozen
food plant in Jonesboro. The facility is the largest new production
operation in company history. Slightly over 1,000 employees
are expected to work at the plant when full operations begin.
Boeing Changes Sales Strategy on Atlanta Area Campus
The Boeing Company's 70-acre campus, located northeast of
Atlanta in Gwinnett County, may be split up rather than sold
in one piece. Boeing has tried for two years to sell the entire
campus, which includes a two-building office/warehouse facility,
a four-story, 106,000 office building and 40 acres of undeveloped
land for $23 million. According to officials with the company,
the pieces of the campus may be more attractive than the whole.
Boeing closed the missile manufacturing facility in 1999.
Birmingham, Nashville Selected for Cingular Call Centers
Cingular Wireless, one of the world's largest cellular providers,
has announced it is closing several call center operations
in the South and consolidating to larger facilities in Birmingham
and Nashville. The company is closing facilities in Orlando,
Boca Raton, New Orleans and Jackson, Miss., as well as smaller
operations in the Southeast. The two new operations in Birmingham
and Nashville are expected to open in October and employ up
to 600.
Trammell Crow to develop $40 million park
Trammell Crow is breaking ground on its first distribution
center in Memphis. The Dallas-based commercial real estate
giant is developing Summit Distribution Center, a 2 million-square-foot,
$40 million project. TC plans to build a 708,000-square-foot
industrial building on 38 acres of the park in Phase I of
the project.
Penske Logistics Opens 100,000 s.f. Facility in Texas
Penske Logistics has opened a 100,000-square-foot distribution
center in Los Indios, Tex., which is located near the Mexican
border. The new facility will provide distribution assistance
to Panasonic's manufacturing operations in Mexico. Penske's
began working with the company in 2000 when Panasonic needed
transportation management of its plants in Mexico and South
Texas.
August
Oreck's Suppliers to Build on Mississippi Gulf Coast
The Long Beach, Miss.-based Oreck vacuum cleaner plant has
prompted two suppliers to open facilities near the Mississippi
Gulf Coast plant. Oregon-based Puget Plastics Corp., which
makes various parts for Oreck, and Kentucky-based John Anson,
are planning supplier operations that are expected to employ
up to 650. The facilities will be located so close to the
Oreck plant, that parts will be moved by a conveyer belt.
Ford Plans Two Distribution Facilities in Memphis
Ford Motor Co. has announced it has signed a lease for 360,000
square feet of distribution space in Memphis and plans to
add up to 640,000 more square feet in the near future. The
company is expected to hire 220 workers at the facilities.
The announcement is part of the auto giant's plans to add
11 parts distribution centers in the U.S. in the next three
years.
Kikkoman Searching for Site in South Carolina
Kikkoman International, the importer and producer of cooking
sauces, sake and soy sauce, is searching the Charlotte area
and two regions of South Carolina for 100 acres to build a
plant that could become a $60 million production facility.
The company would begin with a $10 million investment, building
its third U.S. production center. The company plans a 100,000
square foot building for soy sauce production. The facility
could be expanded later. The plant would begin with 25 workers,
with growth to 50 workers during the first two years of operation.
In their search, Kikkoman is using the code name Project Dirt.
In the Charlotte area, Kikkoman is searching for a site in
Gaston, Cleveland, Stanly and Chester counties. The South
Carolina Department of Commerce is encouraging the company
to also consider locations in Florence and Orangeburg.
Austin Airport Development
An 111-acre, master-planned business park is being built
right at the two entrances of Austin's Bergstrom International
Airport. The new park will feature a privately owned, 2,500-space
parking center and direct access to air freight facilities
at the airport.
Cigna Healthcare to Hire 400 in Charlotte
Cigna is adding 400 to its payroll in Charlotte. The company
will hire 200 claims processors and is looking to add 200
more by the end of 2002. Also, nurses and management personnel
are expected to be hired in the expansion.
Mirant to build plant in Gastonia
Atlanta-based Mirant Corp. plans to build a 1,200-megawatt
natural gas-fired power plant in Gastonia. The facility, which
requires regulatory approval, will be Mirant's first in North
Carolina. Mirant is expected to invest $500 million in the
plant, create 35 permanent jobs and as many as 300 temporary
construction jobs.
Greensboro Raises $1 million in Incentives for Teachers
The Greensboro Chamber of Commerce said today its education
committee had raised more than $1 million in incentives for
new teachers in Guilford County. Some of the incentives also
will be used to attract new teachers next year. Incentives,
which were donated by chamber members, range from discounted
apartment rates and food coupons to reduced closing costs
for home purchases and computer training discounts. The incentives
were raised as part of the effort to lure a total of 500 new
teachers to the county for both public and private schools.
Sundquist Makes More State Budget Cuts
Gov. Don Sundquist announced a budget cut of $1.55 million
from the State Department of Finance and Administration, which
includes eliminating 16 job positions and continuing a freeze
on new hires.
It's the fifth in a series of state budget cuts totaling $33
million. That includes a $12 million cut to higher education;
about $1 million of that will come out of the University of
Memphis. With each new budget cut announcement, Sundquist
has referred to the state budget as a "disaster."
His veto of the budget was overridden during a special session
of the state Legislature.
Manufacturer expands in Cleveland TN
Cormetech, Inc., a manufacturer of pollution control equipment,
is expanding its facility in Cleveland. The company expects
to hire up to 65 new employees. Cormetech makes products that
reduce nitrogen oxide emissions from coal and gas-fired power
plants.
July
Spec Distribution Going Up Near Hartsfield International
A 96,000 square-foot distribution center is being built near
Atlanta's Hartsfield International Airport. The new site is
located near Interstate 75 and Forest Parkway on the eastern
side of the airport. Rents will range from $4.75 to $5.25,
depending on the amount of space leased.
UPS Distribution Center Slated for Atlanta
Atlanta-based UPS has purchased 30 acres in an Empowerment
Zone located just south of Atlanta's Turner field for a new
package distribution center. The large distribution hub will
be UPS' fifth in the Atlanta area. In addition, UPS operates
24 smaller hubs in Atlanta. The new hub is expected to house
up to 300 workers. Former President Clinton created the Atlanta
Empowerment Zone in 1994. The area includes 30 poor inner
city neighborhoods that ring the city's central business district.
Va. Gov. Gilmore Announces Wal-Mart Distribution Center
in Louisa County
Governor Jim Gilmore today announced that Wal-Mart Stores,
Inc., will locate a food distribution center in the Zion Crossroads
area of Louisa County, creating 600 new jobs for the region.
The 880,000 square-foot facility will be located on the northeast
corner of U.S. 15 and I-64. Construction will begin in spring
of 2002, with planned service to stores expected in spring
2003. Louisa is a mostly rural county located between Richmond
and Charlottesville.
Plant Closings Spike Unemployment Claims in June -- State
Numbers are a Dichotomy
Like much of the rest of the country, the South has seen
its share of plant and business closings so far this year.
Unemployment insurance claims set year-to-date highs in June
when nearly 70,000 laid-off or fired Southern workers filed
claims. Especially hard hit was South Carolina. In June, 12,255
people filed jobless insurance claims in that state, a figure
that led the South. The Palmetto State's June total is particularly
disturbing, considering Texas, with over seven-times the population,
had but 10,543 people file. Other states hit hard in the South
include Florida (8,319 filings), Missouri (9,019), Kentucky
(7,560) and Virginia (4,237).
Florida's, Virginia's and Texas' numbers really are not negative
at all. With 15, 7.5 and 20 million residents respectively,
a per capita sum would be very low when crunching numbers
for those highly populated Southern states. Yet, Kentucky's,
Missouri's and South Carolina's numbers are off the scale
when looked at on a per capita basis. In comparison, Mississippi
had but 1,276 filings in June, Louisiana had 745, Alabama
2,649 and Tennessee 2,572. Other than Tennessee, those are
states in the South that compare favorably with South Carolina's
population base.
North Carolina, whose Commerce Secretary Jim Fain has been
very vocal about his state's bout of plant closings, had but
2,505 unemployment insurance filings in the Southern bloodletting
of June 2001. In April, May and June, North Carolina had but
8,000 or so claims, certainly not enough to support Fain's
public whining (but enough to be concerned). Interestingly
enough, Maryland and Virginia, states in the South that are
home to thousands of Internet-related firms, had 745 and 4,233
filings respectively, a relatively low total on a per capita
basis for Virginia and an incredibly low total for Maryland.
Apparently, Internet industry fires get hired immediately
in Maryland.
North Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia and Tennessee,
states which have substantial low-wage industries in their
rural areas, did not show alarming claims in June. More remarkably,
Arkansas, which remains one of the South's lowest household
income states, had only 489 unemployment insurance claims
in June, an outstanding figure compared to other states in
the South. Per capita, Arkansas' claims in June were the South's
lowest, by a large margin. Could that mean existing industry
in Arkansas is profiting when existing industry in South Carolina
is not? Hard to tell.
States outside the South that saw large claims in June were
those with the highest union participation. Pennsylvania (18,176),
Ohio (9,401), Michigan (26,714), Illinois (13,605) and California
(46,675) have seen unemployment claims consistently skyrocket
every month since the first of the year. Unfortunately, South
Carolina, a state that is particularly non-union, is right
up there with them with 12,225 claims in June and is far beyond
the aforementioned non-Southern states per capita.
How can these June unemployment insurance numbers help you
in your site search? Well, they can't, really. On second thought,
maybe they can. One month, even if it it happens to be an
alarming period, cannot indicate much. For example, in South
Carolina's case, it could be that many apparel and textile
jobs were eliminated (an industry that's leaving the South
in droves) in the spring quarter, as opposed to previous quarters,
which was the case in other Southern states. Yet, how do you
account for neighboring North Carolina's low claim figure,
a state that has a much larger apparel industry than South
Carolina? And what about Arkansas' low claim numbers? And
Alabama's? Furthermore, the Internet meltdown has seen more
jobs eliminated than any industry sector. Why then did Maryland
and Virginia, the Internet capital of the South, report only
4,978 filings in June? It's a dichotomy; a misnomer; a freak
of economics.
What is not a freak of economics is the fact that in June
of 2000, exactly one year from the June 2001 bloodletting,
only 403 unemployment insurance claims were filed in entire
17-state American South region. That's only 69,500-or-so less
than June of 2001. That, alone, is a major Southern economic
indicator that was present at the beginning of the summer.
Tempers Fly Over Smart Growth Plan
Loudoun County, Va., one of the fastest-growing areas in
the South, has adopted a new smart growth plan that seeks
to keep two-thirds of the county's rolling farmland free of
development. The Loudoun County Board of Supervisors voted
7 to 2 to adopt the smart growth plan. Business groups opposed
the smart growth plan. In fact, County sheriff deputies were
called in to restore order during voting proceedings. Over
200 opponents of the plant packed the County government center
and repeatedly interrupted the voting proceedings. Loudoun
County is located in northern Virginia, a region that has
seen rapid development in the last several years.
Boeing's New Facility in Houston
The Boeing Company is moving into a new 399,000 square-foot
facility in Clear Lake, Texas, a suburb of Houston. The facility
will serve has the headquarters for Boeing's International
Space Station Program, of which the company is the prime contractor.
The facility will house 840 employees.
Textron Expands in Columbia, Mo.
Textron Automotive is building a $10 million, 64,000 square-foot
facility that will double production at its Columbia, Mo.-based
instrument panel plant. The expansion will add 140 workers
to company payrolls. Textron built the existing plant after
securing a contract with Ford and Mitsubishi. In 1995, Textron
added Chrysler to its product line.
Virginia Gov. Gilmore Announces Major Expansion at Ford
Motor Company's Norfolk Plant
Gov. Jim Gilmore and Ford Motor Co. today announced the expansion
of its Norfolk assembly plant with the addition of a 350,000
square-foot body shop. This expansion will generate up to
200 new jobs over today's employment level of 2,400. During
the next three years, Ford will invest approximately $375
million to expand the Norfolk facility, which assembles the
popular F-150 pickup trucks.
Gov. Gilmore approved a $3 million grant from the Virginia
Investment Partnership program to assist Ford with the expansion.
Ford's Norfolk facility produced approximately 240,000 F-Series
pickup trucks last year. The plant is among the company's
oldest assembly operations and originally produced Model T
cars when it first opened in 1925.
John Deere to Build Plant in Rock Hill, S.C.
Illinois-based John Deere Co., is building a new plant in
Rock Hill, S.C., which is located just across the state line
from Charlotte, N.C. The plant will produce parts for large
lawn tractors and is expected to house up to 165 employees.
The new plant is a partnership with Yanmar Diesel Engine Co.,
the Japanese engine manufacturer.
Georgia Ranked Second-Best Location for Automotive Industry
Business Facilities, a monthly business magazine, has ranked
Georgia as the second-best location in the U.S. for the growing
automotive industry in the South.
The rankings were based on industry figures from the U.S.
Department of Labor that tracked the increase in the number
of automotive employees and in the number of automotive establishments
from 1995 to 1999. In 1998, Georgia ranked sixth in the U.S.
in automotive employment with about 40,000 workers and ranked
seventh in total vehicle production. Two major U.S. automobile
manufacturers, General Motors and Ford Motor Co., have maintained
production facilities in Georgia for decades. The Georgia
Department of Industry, Trade and Tourism has located 26 transportation
equipment projects in Georgia, creating 6,000 jobs with an
investment of $595 million since 1995.
Of the top 10 states cited in the report, seven are Southern
states. Kentucky led all U.S. states in the increase in the
number of automotive employees and in the number of automotive
establishments from 1995 to 1999, followed by Georgia, South
Carolina, Michigan, Texas, Virginia, Indiana, Alabama, North
Carolina and New Hampshire.
NC's Lee Act Performing Well, but Facing Competition From
Other States
North Carolina's main legislative initiative for attracting
good jobs and critical industry investment is paying off overall,
but incentives offered by competing neighbor states "have
in most cases matched our tools, and then surpassed them,"
N.C. Commerce Secretary Jim Fain told members of the General
Assembly's finance committees today.
"Without the William S. Lee Act, we would have been
without a major tool in an escalating interstate competition,
and it will continue to have an important place in our took
kit," Fain said. But he added that North Carolina's recruiting
incentives "compare quite unfavorably with those offered
by neighboring Southeast states."
Fain made the assessment during delivery of a progress report
to the joint legislative hearing on the William S. Lee Quality
Jobs and Business Expansion Act. The act, enacted in 1996
and amended each year to improve its effectiveness and accountability,
provides tax credits to manufacturing firms for job creation,
investing in machinery and equipment, increasing spending
on research and development, training workers and establishing
or expanding central administrative office or aircraft facilities.
Fain said analyses of the Lee Act's performance by the Department
of Commerce and by Dr. Michael Luger of UNC's Kenan Institutute
for Private Enterprise "generally indicate that the act
is doing what it was intended to do," including:
* Modernizing the state's traditional industries by encouraging
$2.6 billion in investment in machinery and equipment.
* Spurring $1 billion in increased research and development
by N.C. companies.
* Stimulating a more-than-proportionate share of jobs and
investment in the state's least- prosperous counties.
* Creating additional jobs and investment indirectly through
increased economic activity in the state.
Fain delivered his update on the act in the context of troubling
economic trends for the state. In the past year, North Carolina
has lost nearly 36,000 manufacturing jobs, about half in the
textile and apparel industries.
"I don't need to tell you that many of our communities
are in distress," Fain said, adding that a national economic
downturn, energy price increases and a strong dollar has caused
"an ongoing loss of manufacturing jobs accelerated at
an alarming rate to what only can be called recession levels."
Report Says Maryland Pulling Ahead
After lagging behind most of the nation in economic growth
through the early '90s, Maryland pulled ahead and outpaced
national economic growth in the second half of the decade,
according to a University of Baltimore study. New business
starts, employment growth and venture capital invested in
Maryland combined to keep the state's economy strong over
the last five years, according to "Benchmarking Maryland's
Business Climate and Socio-Economic Performance, 2001,"
produced by UB's Jacob France Center. Those strengths continue
to five Maryland an edge during the current economic slowdown,
the report concludes.
The study takes a comprehensive look at factors that influence
business and economic growth in Maryland and compares the
state to all 50 states and the District of Columbia in over
145 economic and social indicators. Maryland leads in several
key indicators. The state was ranked:
* 21st nationally in total employment growth over the 1995-2000
period, up from 44th over the 1990-1995 period.
* 15th nationally in total employment growth over the 1999-2000
period.
* 17th nationally in new business starts per 1,000 workers
in 1999.
* Third nationally in the number of SBIR awards per capita
and sixth nationally in total research and development performed
per capita.
* Maryland was ranked sixth nationally in the amount of venture
capital managed by firms within the state and 10th nationally
in the amount of venture capital invested within the state.
The report identified Maryland's chief economic development
assets: highly developed transportation and telecommunications
infrastructures, rich technology assets, and a well-educated
and productive work force. Maryland ranked in the top 10 states
nationally in both interstate and freeway miles.
Maryland is at the top of the information superhighway as
well, with the 11th highest percentage of fiber optic cable
relative to copper cable and third highest level of ISDN control
channels per switched access line in the nation. The state
ranks sixth for total research and development per capita,
and second for both federally performed research and development
per capita, and research and development performed by universities.
The report also identified the state's economic development
weaknesses, including high real estate and labor costs, high
percentage of union workers and per capita tax burden. Maryland
ranks 39th nationally in total state and local taxes per capita
and last regionally. Maryland's personal income taxes as a
percentage of personal income and per capita are among the
highest in the nation.
Maryland's labor costs exceed those of its key competitors,
Virginia and North Carolina. The state's average hourly manufacturing
wages are approximately five percent above the national average,
and the state ranks 11th for highest average hourly manufacturing
wage.
Ernst & Young Report Says NC Legislation Hinders Economic
Development
Commissioned by North Carolina's Department of Commerce,
an Ernst & Young report indicated that the state has fallen
behind many states in the South in the use of tax incentives
to attract industry. The report found that states in the South,
specifically Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, South Carolina and
Tennessee consistently provide more overall tax breaks than
North Carolina. Some Southern states can offer expanding or
relocating industry 20-year tax exemptions. Currently, those
tax breaks are unconstitutional in North Carolina.
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