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EE_
29th April 2014, 12:10 PM
The Texas economy is booming! Good paying high-end jobs are pouring into the Dallas and Houston area.
A lot of growth is planned including more raised freeways. Getting too nuts for me, I couldn't live there, but for someone looking to earn good money, it's the place to be.


..Posted: Tuesday, April 29, 2014 2:07 am | Updated: 1:03 pm, Tue Apr 29, 2014.

Toyota moving US base from California to Texas
Associated Press |

TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) — Toyota delivered a surprise pink slip to California on Monday, announcing the company would move its U.S. headquarters and about 3,000 jobs from the Los Angeles suburbs to the outskirts of Dallas.

The world's largest automaker will keep a foothold in the Golden State — about 2,300 jobs will remain in California after the company settles into its new corporate campus in Plano, Texas. But the announcement is an economic and symbolic slap for California, a historic center of American car culture that has been trying to shake its reputation as a frustrating place to run a business, whether that involves shooting a film or selling a Prius.

"When you look at the whole package, it's difficult to be a business here," lamented Torrance Mayor Frank Scotto, whose community on the edge of the Pacific will suffer as the jobs migrate to Texas.

"If all these great, high-end jobs are leaving California, then we are going to turn into a place that's a retirement community" with low-paying service-sector jobs, Scotto said. "We can't have that," he added, warning that unless the state has a change of attitude, "it's going to be way too late."

Toyota's announcement comes about two months after Occidental Petroleum Corp. disclosed it was moving its headquarters to Houston from Los Angeles. Texas Gov. Rick Perry has been on a publicity campaign to promote his state as a haven for businesses seeking lower taxes and eased government regulation, but Toyota didn't mention what, if any, role Perry played in the company's decision.

Perry, who made two visits to California to lure employers to his state, said Texas offered Toyota $40 million in incentives from the taxpayer-funded Texas Enterprise Fund. The Republican governor said Toyota is expected to invest $300 million in the new headquarters.

Republicans in California quickly blamed Sacramento for the loss, where Democrats control both chambers of the Legislature and every statewide office. A statement issued by Gov. Jerry Brown's Office of Business and Economic Development did not mention Toyota but stressed the state's steadied balance sheet and jobs recovered after the devastating recession.

"Ford, Volkswagen and Nissan continue to invest in California, and the Golden State remains the center of new electric, zero-emission and self-driving vehicle manufacturing and technology," the statement said.

Toyota will break ground this year on its new environmentally friendly headquarters in Plano, about 25 miles north of Dallas. Small groups of employees will start moving to temporary office space there this year, but most won't move until late 2016 or early 2017 when the new headquarters is completed.

The new campus will bring together about 4,000 employees from sales, marketing, engineering, manufacturing and finance.

Toyota also plans to expand its technical center near Ann Arbor, Mich., and move about 250 parts procurement positions there from Georgetown, Ky., where the Camry and Avalon sedans are made. That will free up space for approximately 300 production engineers to move from Erlanger, Ky., to Georgetown. Toyota will have 8,200 employees in Kentucky after the moves are complete.

Jim Lentz, Toyota's CEO for North America, said the new headquarters will enable faster decision making. Lentz told The Associated Press that the move is one of the most significant changes in Toyota's 57-year history in the U.S.

"We needed to be much more collaborative," he said.

Lentz said any employee who wants to move will be given a relocation package and retention bonus. The company is also offering to send employees and their spouses or partners to the new locations to look for new homes.

"Everything we are doing is encouraging people to go," he said.

Plano Mayor Harry LaRosilliere said Toyota's announcement was the result of an intense, three-month courtship but the company's decision was "years in the making."

Plano economic development director Sally Bane said when Toyota decided to hone in on Texas, the city jumpstarted its own campaign, hiring a private consultant who worked with Toyota to help close the deal.

Toyota will join Cigna Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co. and Pepsico Inc.'s Frito Lay in a city with an unemployment rate lower than the state average. Plano's 265,000 residents have a median income of $81,000, one of the highest in the country.

Toyota Motor Corp. has had a presence in California since 1957, when it opened its first U.S. headquarters in a former Rambler dealership in Hollywood. The following year — Toyota's first in the U.S. market — it sold 287 Toyopet Crown sedans and one Land Cruiser.

By 1975, Toyota had become the top import brand in the U.S. It opened its current U.S. headquarters in Torrance in 1982. Toyota sold 2.2 million cars and trucks in the U.S. last year.

The company also maintains offices in New York and Washington. Plants in Mississippi, Texas and Indiana aren't affected by the moves.

Lentz, who became Toyota's first CEO for the North America region in 2013, said Toyota President Akio Toyoda encouraged him to think of ways to make North America more self-reliant. Lentz said he began working on the idea of a combined headquarters last April or May.

The company decided not to locate in California because it was too far from its plants in the Midwest. Kentucky was rejected because Erlanger wasn't big enough, and Ann Arbor was rejected because it was too close to Detroit rivals like General Motors and Ford.

Lentz said the company ultimately came up with a list of 100 possibilities that it whittled down to four.

"As we visited those four primary locations, it became quite clear that the Dallas metro area was far and above the best choice," Lentz said. He wouldn't disclose the other three finalists.

http://www.themonitor.com/news/us_news/toyota-moving-us-base-from-california-to-texas/article_57cb60cd-7696-5c91-8c35-07cbcef7dfc4.html

Dogman
29th April 2014, 12:16 PM
Austen/San Antonio/Dallas/Houston and east Texas centered around Tyler/Smith county have been doing good. Good business atmosphere!

Sent from my Nexus 7 using Forum Runner

Ponce
29th April 2014, 12:23 PM
Well, like I told a customer of mine that wanted lower and lower priced....."I am in business to make money for myself and not for you", If I don't make any money then.....why have a business?

V

Dachsie
30th April 2014, 12:37 AM
Every time I read one of these good news for Texas economy articles, I have to try to inject some truth into the conversation. The Texas economy is fake and is crumbling at the edges all around me. Things look rosy on the surface but all of the major social and economic indicators show Texas is dying fast. Sorry to rain on this positive sounding news for Texas. I just get tired of these stories trying to say the economy in Texas is really booming and great. Businesses are closing all around me every day.

The Dallas / Ft Worth (including Plano) metroplex is a giant zoo. It is not a good place to live. Many of the north Dallas high school kids are on dope and have been for many years. The traffic situation is horrible. The smog is not so bad like it is in California but give it time. The weather is no so great in Dallas as it is in more sourthern warmer climes of the state. Lots of freezing days and snow in Dallas.

Agenda 21 is going full force in Texas so they want to turn all the roads into toll roads and all the outlying roads are not to be tarred or paved, but low quality gravel roads. They are well on their way to ruining our once outstanding quality Texas highway system. Another big agenda of Agenda 21 is to get people out of their personal automobiles. They want everybody to live in stack-em-and-pack-ems in the big cities on rail and bus lines and only use public transportation. So they won't sell so many of those Texas made Toyotas to Texans.

I guess a lot of the California Toyota people will move to Texas because there are no other jobs in Ca. for them so this won't mean many new jobs for Texans. Texas is a right to work state (or non union) state but Ca. was a union (closed shop) state. That will be a major positive change for the Toyota owners and management but I do not know how the workers will adjust to that.

Everything Perry arranges through these so-called public - private partnerships and taxpayer provided incentives is crooked and turns bad really fast.

mick silver
30th April 2014, 12:14 PM
Toyota also moving over 2000 jobs from ky also and those are also going to texas

mick silver
1st May 2014, 06:21 AM
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WHAS11) -- Toyota is closing its Erlanger, Ky. headquarters which means nearly 1,600 jobs from that facility will be moving to Texas.

The move was announced on Monday, April 28, but it's not expected to begin until 2017.

All of the jobs from its U.S. Headquarters in California will also be moving to Texas.

Toyota says the new headquarters will bring together employees who are now scattered around the country.

Gov. Steve Beshear released the following statement:

“Obviously, we are extremely disappointed by Toyota’s decision. We would have welcomed the opportunity to discuss options with Toyota, but we will now turn our attention to preparing for this transition.

We also are disappointed that the lives of hundreds of Kentuckians will be disrupted, and we pledge to assist those families however we possibly can. This transition will take two to three years to achieve, and Toyota has assured us that the company plans to offer industry-leading programs and packages to its people.

In the past 30 years, Toyota has invested approximately $6 billion in Kentucky. And with 300 jobs moving from Erlanger to Georgetown and 750 new jobs being added to support production of the Lexus ES 350, there will be some 8,200 Toyota employees in Kentucky after the move. The Toyota officials have assured us that a continued strong presence in Kentucky is central to Toyota’s ongoing success.

Kentucky remains a powerful force in auto manufacturing, and we will do everything possible to maintain and strengthen Kentucky's position as one of the top states for the auto industry.”