Wyandotte County expected to see economic benefit from Panasonic plant

Gov. Laura Kelly

by Mary Rupert

The $4 billion Panasonic project that was landed in DeSoto, Kansas, should also benefit Johnson and Wyandotte counties and surrounding areas, Gov. Laura Kelly said in a telephone interview Wednesday.

“It will have a huge ripple effect through Johnson County, Wyandotte County and beyond,” Gov. Kelly said. She’s also expecting it to benefit Lyon, Miami and Franklin counties, all within a driving distance.

The new plant will make electric vehicle batteries. The project will bring in 4,000 jobs, and following them will be other companies that make more capital investments, Gov. Kelly said. She is anticipating approximately another 4,000 jobs for the suppliers who will set up shop in and around northeast Kansas.

Gov. Kelly currently is making an economic development tour of Kansas, in a sort of victory lap, discussing the recent gains for the state. She is scheduled to make a stop in Kansas City, Kansas, on Thursday.

Wyandotte County should expect to see people moving in, and will probably need more housing, with schools seeing an increase in enrollment, and businesses should have more customers as a result of the new Panasonic plant, she said.

Unequivocally, the $825 million in incentives that Kansas offered Panasonic will be worth it, Gov. Kelly said. There are a lot of guardrails around the incentives, and the plant will not get any incentives until it produces, builds a facility and hires people, she said.

“Panasonic is a well-established, reputable company that doesn’t do anything second-rate,” she said. They won’t make an investment and decide to pull up roots shortly afterward, she said. When they make an investment, they’re in it for the long haul.

Every year Panasonic is up and running, they’ll see $2.5 billion in economic activity in the state of Kansas, Gov. Kelly said. Even in the first year, the state would recapture the incentives, she added.

“You have to invest to grow, and that’s what we did here, and it will be a game changer for the state of Kansas,” she said.

Gov. Kelly said she wanted to see economic development in all areas of the state, in the rural, urban, suburban and inner city areas.

“You can trust that we are working, partnering with our counties, Wyandotte County and others, and cities, to look for economic opportunities that are a good fit for them,” she said. When projects come along and it makes sense for a project to locate in eastern Wyandotte County, the state will be right there working along the folks from Wyandotte County, she added.

Gov. Kelly said she is also working on other issues that will help with economic development. One of those is working with the county to increase the number of quality child care slots available here. Also, there are housing issues here that differ from rural communities, and they are working on solutions to these.

Sometimes Kansas City, Kansas, residents say that they have not been able to get some of the high-paying jobs that are offered here.

Gov. Kelly said Kansas has a very strong Workforce Partnership operation going on, Kansas Works, where they are connecting with potential employees. Residents may research the jobs online and get connected, and there are also Workforce centers where they can go, and receive job counseling on what would be a good fit. Currently, there are about 65,000 jobs on the state’s Workforce database.

Gov. Kelly said the state and the local community, including Kansas City Kansas Community College, are working with a scholarship program that essentially pays for people to go to a community college or technical school to get a certificate or associate degree in a trade, nursing, welding or other program. These graduates are picked up very quickly by employers, she added.

“With all of the success we have had, we know that Kansas in the next few years will be in really good shape,” Gov. Kelly said about the future of the state.

“We need to keep our eye on the ball here – economic development is not something you do one year and let it go,” she said. “This will be ongoing during my administration, to continue to focus efforts on growing the state of Kansas, attracting more business, building our work force.” Younger residents will be able to stay in Kansas with jobs available to them, she said.

The state also is doing recruiting efforts to draw people back to Kansas or invite them to live here for the first time, she added.

When these efforts are packaged together, the state can be pretty attractive, a good job, a place with good schools and good housing, she added.

Kansas landed a $4 billion Panasonic factory in De Soto that will make batteries for Tesla

by Dylan Lysen and Jim McLean, KCUR and Kansas News Service

Topeka, Kansas — A subsidiary of Japanese industrial giant Panasonic Corp. announced plans Wednesday to build a $4 billion plant to make batteries for electric vehicles on the site of a former ammunition plant at the western edge of the Kansas City area.

Officials promised a payroll that will eventually cover some 4,000 jobs and predicted that thousands of other jobs in the region will spring from the factory in De Soto, Kansas. State subsidies topping $829 million for the project are tied to employment levels.

“We will be the production epicenter for batteries that will power the increasing demand for EVs in a more sustainable world,” Gov. Laura Kelly said. “Innovations happening right here in Kansas will accelerate the future of electric vehicles on a global scale.”

The deal comes after Kelly, a Democrat running for reelection, enlisted the help of the Republicans who control the Legislature to promise up to $1.3 billion in tax breaks and other incentives to land the massive economic development project.

Kris Takamoto, executive vice president for Panasonic Energy, said during an announcement event that the company’s plant in Kansas will be part of its environmental effort.

“We’re thrilled to partner with Kansas,” he said. “Together with the people of Kansas, we will build an EV battery supply chain to (support a) more prosperous and sustainable future.”

Troubled property

Along with jobs, the billions in private spending and tax rebates raise new hopes to develop the site of the former Sunflower Army Ammunition Plant.

Developers have floated a range of projects for the land since it became contaminated making rocket propellant during the Vietnam War. The cost of cleaning up the land has scuttled one large development proposal after the next for decades.

In February, the Johnson County Board of Commissioners dissolved the long-dormant Sunflower Community Redevelopment Authority and gave more control to Sunflower Redevelopment, LLC, to find a use for the property.

That opened the way for De Soto and Sunflower Redevelopment to look into what was described publicly as plans for 10 million square feet of new industrial and light manufacturing space. The 9,000 acres, much of it recently annexed into De Soto, sits south of Kansas 10.

Lt. Gov. David Toland, who is also the state’s commerce secretary, confirmed the site would be the location for the Panasonic plant and said that the pollution has been cleaned up.

The Sunflower land at the western edge of Johnson County on the border with Leavenworth County is the largest undeveloped swath of property near Kansas City.

Changing the limits

In the spring, the Legislature approved new rules giving state officials the ability to promise larger giveaways to entice employers to Kansas. The Kansas State Finance Council approved the subsidies for Panasonic in closed session on Wednesday.

Kelly’s administration and key Republican lawmakers were told which company the state was courting over the past year, but they signed non-disclosure agreements promising to keep the information confidential.

That meant Kansas dramatically increased the tax breaks it could offer a manufacturer even while keeping secret from the public the name of the company, where it wanted to build in the state and what it might produce. It wasn’t known publicly, for instance, that the record-setting tax breaks would go to a foreign company.

And Elon Musk, who runs the Tesla plant in Texas that will benefit from a huge battery maker in Kansas, has since become a figure of increasing controversy. Most recently, he’s tried to back out of his $40-plus billion purchase of Twitter.

Kelly said the stealthy economic development ploy paid off. The tax breaks and other subsidies granted to the Japanese firm on Wednesday marked the state’s richest-ever incentive package.

“A new facility of this size is transformational, not only for Johnson County but also the surrounding area — actually, the entire state,” the governor said.

In promoting the effort to land the company in Kansas, state officials projected an additional 4,000 jobs working for suppliers to supply the factory in addition to those directly working at the manufacturing plant.

Kelly made Toland the point person on the campaign to bring the Japanese manufacturer to the state. He argued that whether Kansas landed this company or not, changing the rules on tax incentives could put Kansas in play to seduce other “megaprojects.”

That culminated on Wednesday when Panasonic confirmed it had chosen Kansas.

“Kansas has an impressive history of being home to a skilled manufacturing workforce,” Takamoto said. “We appreciate Kansas’s dedication to sustainability and its commitment to and growth in the clean and renewable energy space.”

Tax breaks


The incentives granted to Panasonic include:
• An investment tax credit of $500 million over five years.
• A payroll rebate of $234 million over five years.
• Training and education subsidies of $25 million over five years.
• Relocation payments of $10 million over five years.
• A sales tax exemption worth $60.2 million over five years.

Companies must agree to repay benefits if the performance metrics aren’t met. In addition, the state can claw back a percentage of the benefits if a company relocates to another state within 15 years of entering its agreement.

“These incentives must be earned,” Toland said before the deal to land the battery plant came together. “The company gets the investment tax credit after they invest. The company gets the payroll rebate after they’ve hired and paid people.”

Charging up

The new plant could conceivably help some everyday Kansans by purchasing significant amounts of electricity from its energy provider, Evergy.

Ashok Gupta, an energy economist with the Natural Resource Defense Council, said Evergy would sell electricity to the plant to produce the batteries. The more energy the plant purchases for its manufacturing, the less Kansas residents may need to pay to cover Evergy’s operating costs.

“That can, in theory, help all other customers lower their costs,” Gupta said. “This is a good economic development play.”

It could also be a boon to Evergy stockholders. Utilities prefer customers that demand large amounts of electricity at a steady rate because it makes it easier for them to build their capacity to match demand.

Competing for Panasonic

In April, Oklahoma lawmakers, at the urging of Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt, approved an incentive package aimed at keeping that state in the running for the plant. Targeted at projects of at least $3.6 billion, it authorized a rebate for 3.4% of a company’s investment in the year that it is made for up to five successive years. A summary of the bill put the value of the incentive at $700 million.

Stitt said the incentive package was aimed at making Oklahoma a destination for companies in the electric vehicle industry.

“Tens of billions of dollars are going to be invested over the next five to seven years in this space and we want Oklahoma to be the spot that these folks land,” Stitt said.

In March, Bloomberg News reported that Panasonic was in talks with both Kansas and Oklahoma officials about a site to manufacture lithium-ion batteries for Tesla and other electric vehicle makers.

The Bloomberg report cited unnamed sources saying the company had plans for bigger battery cells, what the company calls its 4680 model, to meet the demand to increase the range of electric vehicles. Bloomberg’s sources also said other kinds of batteries might be made at the plant. Panasonic is on pace to start making the 4680 batteries in Japan in the next year.

Japanese broadcaster NHK also reported earlier this year that Panasonic was eyeing Oklahoma and Kansas as possible locations, partly because they sit relatively close to the new “gigafactory” that Tesla is ramping up in Texas.

Both Kansas and Oklahoma are so-called right-to-work states where it’s easier for employers to keep out unions. Kazuo Tadanobu, chief executive officer of Panasonic’s energy business, told Bloomberg News that any new plant locations would turn on existing partnerships with the company and the economics of a region.

The world market for lithium-ion batteries is projected by the industry to grow from $30 billion in 2017 to $100 billion in 2025.

Debated incentives

When Kansas legislators debated whether to OK the bigger tax breaks Kelly wanted, some lawmakers questioned the wisdom of clearing the way for a company that could already be profitable and that might bring environmental problems to the state. And some critics said the large-scale incentives put smaller businesses at a disadvantage.

Sen. Caryn Tyson, a Parker Republican, said one small business owner who urged her to oppose the incentive package said the title of the bill should be changed to “crony capitalism kicks existing Kansas businesses in the face.”

Dave Trabert, president of the Kansas Policy Institute, a conservative think-tank that lobbies for reduced government spending, said a better recruitment strategy would be to lower taxes for all companies operating in the state.

“We could give one big lollipop to one company, or we could wipe out the income tax liability of all the corporations in Kansas,” Trabert said when testifying against the incentive legislation.

But legislative leaders in both parties helped push the bill through after they signed non-disclosure agreements and learned the identity of what was then a mystery company.

“A project of this magnitude is something that can change the state for generations,” state Senate President Ty Masterson, an Andover Republican, said in the spring.

Mark Williams heads a South Carolina-based firm that negotiates deals for companies looking for locations to expand. He said states that don’t have competitive incentives stand little chance of success.

“It’s a very important factor,” Williams said.

Not only financially, he said, but psychologically.

Companies looking to make big investments, Williams said, “like it when they feel a state is embracing them and taking some risk with them.”

“From a decision-making perspective, that’s an important factor that I think is often overlooked,” he said.

Dylan Lysen reports on politics for the Kansas News Service. You can follow him on Twitter @DylanLysen or email him at dlysen (at) kcur (dot) org. Jim McLean is the senior correspondent for the Kansas News Service. You can reach him on Twitter @jmcleanks or email jim (at) kcur (dot) org.
The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy.
Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.

See more at https://www.kcur.org/news/2022-07-13/kansas-reportedly-landing-4-billion-factory-that-will-make-batteries-for-tesla

Kansas House gives incentive package for secret company megaproject stamp of approval

Senate to take up bill Wednesday

by Noah Taborda, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Kansas representatives deflected concerns Tuesday about the secrecy surrounding a bill wooing an unnamed company expected to invest billions of dollars in the state, sending the measure back to the Senate with their stamp of approval.

The Attracting Powerful Economic Expansion Act, or APEX, was brought forward at the behest of the governor and the secretary of commerce. It looks to provide Kansas with an edge over Oklahoma in competing for a production plant into which the secret company plans to invest $4 billion. The bill provides a refundable tax credit of up to 15%— Kansas would be on the hook for $600 million in this instance — paid back over 10 years.

In addition, the measure offers payroll reimbursement for the company of 7.5%. Estimates from nonpartisan legislative staff indicate the act would cost approximately $1.2 billion.

After more than an hour of debate, concerns about the secrecy of the deal, which involved some members entering into nondisclosure agreements to learn more concrete details, were trumped by the potential many legislators saw in the bill.

“I think that we have reached a reasonable compromise,” said Rep. Stephanie Clayton, D-Overland Park, noting efforts to clean up the Senate proposal. “I am very proud to have worked with the members of the House Commerce Committee … to make sure that we get something reasonable that does have good oversight and something that honestly gives every single one of us an opportunity to take a good, old-fashioned, pro-business vote.”

The House voted 80 to 41 to send the bill over to the Senate for a concurrence vote. Should the Senate approve the bill, APEX will head to Gov. Laura Kelly for final approval.

Both the governor’s proposal and the Senate iteration raised concerns in the House Commerce panel about potential impacts to the budget. Estimates from legislative staff indicated Kelly’s proposal would sap the budget surplus and leave the state in a deficit in 2026.

The Senate revised the bill by removing refundability from the tax credit and including a corporate income tax cut that would leave the state in a better, albeit still negative, budgetary situation.

To ease those concerns, the House reinstated the refundable credit, extended the payout from three to 10 years and added oversight from the State Finance Council before any the secretary of commerce reaches any agreement or amends any payout durations. They also added a sunset of May 1, 2024, and limited the number of agreements the state can reach to one per year.

The House proposal still cuts the corporate income tax of 4% by 0.5%, but only once for each project, rather than each year the company benefits from the incentive package, as the Senate proposed.

Despite the added safeguards, Rep. John Carmichael, a Wichita Democrat, was unwilling to bet his constituents’ tax dollars on the program, even if he had confidence in the governor and commerce secretary. He said that for all they knew the company could be pornographic, driving home that question marks surrounding the bill were many, except for the select few who signed NDAs.

“Did somebody buy this deal? We don’t know.” Carmichael said. “You’re going to go spend your constituents’ money on the hope and the prayer that people who’ve signed nondisclosure agreements are representing you, as a legislator and your constituents, because you can’t represent them yourself.”

The measure also includes clawback provisions requiring the company to repay funds should it leave the state 10 to 15 years after the deal.

Rep. Leo Delperdang, a Wichita Republican, voted in favor of the measure after admitting he was conflicted about which side he fell on. He urged legislators to keep in mind the potential effect approving this budgetary boon could have on the feasibility of some other proposals, such as eliminating the food sales tax.

“I am assuming the same is true for any rainy-day funds or the efforts from several in this body for Medicaid expansion,” Delperdang said.

Rep. Henry Helgerson echoed Delperdang’s concerns about potential collateral damage.

“We’re betting the bank,” the Eastborough Democrat said. “We’re betting school finance. We’re betting the social service network. Somebody better get down here and ask, are we biting off more than we can chew?”

The APEX bill also incentivizes employees of the company looking to relocate to Kansas through a $10 million matching incentive fund. An amendment from Rep. Trevor Jacobs, a Fort Scott Republican would reduce the amount of money offered to employees for food and lodging while they relocate.

The Senate plans to take up the House version of the bill Wednesday.

In a meeting of Senate Republicans, Sen. Caryn Tyson, of Parker, asked for an official cost estimate for the incentives package.

“We’re voting blind here,” Tyson said. “Even the talking heads on PBS are mocking us for this legislation.”

The Department of Commerce has argued the state needs the program after whiffing in the past on 11 megaprojects.

Lt. Gov. and Commerce secretary David Toland asked senators to put aside politics and work to push this measure across the finish line. He said the state is at risk of missing another economic opportunity should it fail to pass this bill.

“Failing to take into account $2.5 billion annually in new economic activity, along with presenting projections that are only based on worst-case scenarios paints a picture that shows none of the benefits to Kansas,” Toland said. “The opportunity we have in front of us today would be transformative, by creating thousands of new jobs and injecting billions of dollars into the Kansas economy.”

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/02/08/kansas-house-gives-incentive-package-for-secret-company-megaproject-stamp-of-approval/