Politics & Government
China Hub: Turbulence Possible As Discussion Continues
While many Missouri leaders lined up in St. Louis this week to voice their support for the proposal, groups such as the Show-Me Institute argue that the government should avoid involvement in the issue.
PatchΒ is pleased to partner with Brian R. Hook,Β editor and investigative reporter forΒ Missouri Watchdog,Β a news website dedicated to investigative journalism about local, state and federal government across Missouri. We've invited Hook to contribute a weekly column that describes what he's watching and why it's important for Missouri taxpayers.
Fasten your seat belts. Prepare for landing. Aerotropolis is on approach toΒ St. Louis.
Aerotropolis is a plan that is designed to turnΒ St. LouisΒ into a global cargo hub.
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According to anΒ economic-impact studyΒ by theΒ St. Louis Regional Chamber of Commerce and Growth Association, the missing piece of a multi-model infrastructure system for theΒ St. LouisΒ region is air cargo.
The $300 million in tax credits for warehouses aroundΒ Lambert-St. Louis International AirportΒ would generate $1.5 billion in new construction and would boost employment by more than 6,000 jobs, the RCGA reports.
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TheΒ RepublicanΒ leadership from theΒ Missouri General AssemblyΒ flew intoΒ St. LouisΒ on Wednesday toΒ line up with political and business leaders from around the St. Louis region. They wereΒ promoting their newΒ job-creation compromise plan, which would provide state tax credits for developers to build warehouses for air cargo.
Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, aΒ Democrat, landed inΒ St. LouisΒ on Thursday and announced his plans to call lawmakers back for aΒ special session in September. One of his priorities is new infrastructure around the airport.
So is it safe to assume that Aerotropolis will land inΒ St. Louis?
Not so fast. There may be turbulence ahead.
On the surface, it may seem like everyone is lining up in support. But there is opposition.
TheΒ Show-Me Institute, for instance, is on a mission to knock Aerotropolis out of the sky. The free-market think tank inΒ St. LouisΒ argues that the government should not be in the business of picking winners and losers.
In addition toΒ releasing a case studyΒ that refutes many of the arguments from the economic impact study by the RCGA, policy analysts from the think-tank drove around the airportΒ locating plenty of open warehouse space.
Plus, the person who literally wrote the book on Aerotropolis said the plan wonβt work inΒ St. Louis.
Greg Lindsay, author of βAerotropolis: The Way Weβll Live Nextβ told theΒ St. Louis Business JournalΒ that theΒ plan for more than $300 million in tax credits will not succeed in creating an international trade hubΒ inΒ St. Louis.
βNobody asked me, but as the guy who wrote the book on the subject, I donβt think it will work there,β Lindsay told web editorΒ Kelsey Volkmann, adding that βbuild it and they will comeβ will not work for airports.
Finally, will lawmakers from aroundΒ MissouriΒ give up their state tax credits forΒ St. Louis?
Weβll see in September, andΒ Missouri WatchdogΒ will be watching.
For news updates,Β sign up for a newsletterΒ and followΒ Missouri WatchdogΒ onΒ TwitterΒ andΒ Facebook. Brian R. Hook may be reached by phone at 314-482-7944 or by email at brhook@missouriwatchdog.org.
