Raleigh makes the short list for Amazon HQ2

Charlotte out of the running for the new project

REUTERS/Carlos Jasso/Illustration

RALEIGH – Amazon.com has short-listed 20 cities and regions for the construction of a second headquarters that it says will generate 50,000 new, high-paying jobs.  Raleigh made the cut as the only city from N.C. and as Amazon selected from 238 initial applicants.

The list includes Toronto in Canada, but major U.S. centers including New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago and Washington D.C. made up the list announced on Thursday, along with smaller cities such as Raleigh and Columbus, Ohio. Notably absent from the list were Charlotte, High Point, and the Winston-Salem area, all N.C. cities to submit proposals for the Amazon HQ2. The Research Triangle Regional Partnership was tasked with bringing Amazon to the Triangle.

The others cities still in the running are Atlanta, Austin, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Indianapolis, Miami, Montgomery County in Maryland, Nashville, Newark, Northern Virginia, Philadelphia, and Pittsburgh.

Cutting down the list from more than 200 locations, the announcement was broadly in line with expectations and is the first stage in a fight over the thousands of jobs and billions in secondary investment and revenue the “HQ2” will bring.

Following Apple’s announcement on Wednesday that it would build a new campus and create 20,000 new jobs as part of a $30 billion investment, it also underlines the growing power of U.S. technology companies over the economy.

Amazon promised when it launched bidding in September that the new headquarters, an equal of its Seattle head office, would create up to 50,000 jobs averaging more than $100,000 in annual compensation over the next 10 to 15 years.

Some bidders have already gone public with promises of billions of dollars in tax breaks for the tech giant if they were chosen. However most cities, including those in N.C., have kept the details of such incentive packages private.

New Jersey proposed $7 billion in potential credits against state and city taxes if the company chooses Newark and sticks to hiring commitments.

The mayor of the Atlanta suburb of Stonecrest, Jason Lary, said his city could use 345 acres of industrial land to create a new city called Amazon and make Chief Executive Jeff Bezos its mayor for life.

Amazon said on Thursday it expected to make a decision this year and would work with each of the candidate locations to get more information and evaluate the feasibility of a future partnership.