Amazon faces new headache as Nashville deal enrages locals left and right

Unlikely alliance of free-market libertarians and union-backed activists argue $100m-plus in subsidies handed to retailer are a bad investment for the city

Nashville has a way of bringing people together usually through music. This time its through a shared antipathy for the $100m-plus in subsidies this booming city has just handed to Amazon, the worlds most valuable retailer.

The ink has barely dried on a deal that the state of Tennessee and the city awarded Amazon and there are now only a few small hurdles remaining before Amazon starts moving in to a downtown office complex planned for Nashville Yards.

But an unusual alliance of free-market libertarians and union-backed activists is determined to hold the politicians and executives responsible for the deal to account. Their hope is that it will serve as a warning to others looking to hand public money to profitable companies in return for the promise of new jobs.

This is one area where libertarians and socialists can agree on something: this is a bad idea, said John Mozena, president of the Center for Economic Accountability, a free market advocacy group and a self described libertarian.

Local activist Odessa Kelly agrees. A parks and recreations employee and member of the union-backed Stand Up Nashville coalition she says the deal is symptomatic of an approach that is failing the city while handing millions to a company that doesnt need it.

Construction work goes on in Nashville Yards, where Amazon plans to locate an operations hub. Photograph: Mark Humphrey/AP

We are being moved around like pawns on a chess board for the rich, she says. I hate to say it but we have become a playground for the rich.

It wasnt supposed to be this way. Last November Amazon announced that the capital of country music was one of its chosen cities, following a long search to build HQ2 a second base away from its Seattle headquarters. States and cities across the US had fought hard in a sometimes bizarre beauty pageant to win the prize. Arizona offered Amazon a giant cactus to seal the deal.

In the end HQ2 was split between Queens in New York and Virginias Arlington County. Nashville picked up the consolation prize and a promise of 5,000 high-paying jobs.

For all the political schmoozing and promises of a prime future, being part of HQ2 has proven problematic. The backlash from residents and politicians in New York was so fierce that Amazon canceled its plans. Politicians in Virginia too have felt the heat from locals who worry about the impact of gentrification.

The fight in Nashville is far from over. Following pressure from Stand up Nashville and others, Amazon (and any other corporation receiving taxpayer funds) will have to publish accounts to prove it is living up to its promise to deliver high-paid jobs to locals. Amazon is not be the first company to promise big benefits in return for subsidies, but few will be as closely watched in the years ahead.

Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/us

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