"There's a tsunami coming in," Gilman said, referring to the
businesses, developers and workers he envisions occupying the place
some day. The site, already partly occupied by warehouses and
distribution facilities for Wal-Mart, Amazon and Federal Express, is
where Elon Musk's electric car maker Tesla Motors plans a factory to
make batteries, helped by more than $1 billion of incentives
provided by Nevada.
Out on the horizon, just past the boundaries of the industrial park,
can be seen the red-tiled roofs of another of Gilman's properties:
the Mustang Ranch, the first licensed brothel in Nevada. For Gilman,
this dry, desolate slice of Storey County is where the old Nevada,
symbolized by adult entertainment like gambling and prostitution,
meets a new Nevada, where high-tech manufacturing and distribution
businesses built on an immense scale may restore some of the state's
fabled wealth.
"In the 1800s, Storey County was the richest place on earth because
of the Comstock Lode, gold and silver," said Gilman, 69, who bought
the land for the industrial park with a partner for $20 million in
the late 1990s. "Then it became poor. Now, maybe it will be the
richest place again."
That's a hope shared by Nevadans ranging from Republican Governor
Brian Sandoval to the residents of nearby Reno, which exited the
recession with an unemployment rate of 14 percent, well above the
national peak of 10 percent during the economic downturn.
The Tesla deal, negotiated by Sandoval in hope of bringing as many
as 22,000 jobs to the state, includes a $5 billion factory to
produce lithium ion batteries for electric cars. Tesla alone may
employ 6,500 people at the new plant, 20 miles east of Reno. In the
past three years, 50 companies have moved to the area, helping cut
unemployment in half and restoring some life to a town that calls
itself "The Biggest Little City in the World" but is littered with
aging casinos and seedy bars.
The land where the Tesla plant will be built is an undeveloped
portion of the massive industrial park, fully zoned for a commercial
center, including seven miles of its own private railroad tracks, a
lake for recycled water to use in production, fiber-optic cable
already laid throughout and roads planned and approved. The location
is next to Interstate 80, a transcontinental highway than runs from
New York to San Francisco.
"Welcome to Nevada," Wayne H. Wilson, a 51-year-old out-of-work
software marketer from Reno wrote in a draft of a letter to Tesla
after the deal was announced. "Let's talk."
As soon as the deal was announced, real estate brokers began
fielding calls, and job-seekers like Wilson sent out resumes.
Companies wanting to work with Tesla have been scouting locations,
and community colleges and training centers are trying to figure out
how to prepare unemployed residents for the new jobs.
Among the training programs under consideration is one on how to
work with and dispose of hazardous by-products of making the
batteries, said Pieter Droog, who manages the job search and
training center ProNet near the Reno airport.
Wilson said he hopes that his experience working with a local mining
company will make him attractive to Tesla or one of its future
suppliers, in part because the electric car batteries will be made
with lithium, which is mined in Nevada.
Halfway across the country in Tennessee, Randy Robinette also
drafted a letter to Tesla in the days after the deal was made.
Robinette, who lived in Reno for eight years until 2005, specializes
in human resources - and he figures Tesla will need plenty of help
with that as it moves to hire and provide benefits for 6,500 people.
He's planning a trip west in the next month or two.
"I'm going to check out the Reno market in terms of housing and
everything, and perhaps migrate over to the California office to see
if I can get an appointment," the 58-year-old said.
In Washoe County, where Reno is located, public school officials
held hasty meetings to plan for a possible influx of new children.
Critics question the state's decision to throw so much money at
Tesla, ending tax-incentive programs for the film industry that had
helped the Las Vegas area, along with incentives for the insurance
industry.
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"The process moved very quickly and we really questioned whether
lawmakers had time to look at expected benefits of the deal and what
the potential risks were," said Andy Matthews, president of the free
market Nevada Policy Research Institute. "How are taxpayers
protected if Tesla's business product does not succeed?" Started
by Elon Musk, an early PayPal investor and founder of the private
space travel company Spacex, Tesla Motors is based in Palo Alto,
California, and employs about 6,000 people, according to its
website. Its cars are built in the San Francisco suburb of Fremont.
Tesla said it lost $62 million in the second quarter, when they
delivered 7,579 vehicles. The company says it's on track to deliver
35,000 cars by the end of 2014. A Tesla Model S retails for $71,070,
according to the Tesla website.
Storey County officials say they don’t want residential development
near the site, a decision that means residents, business owners and
local authorities in nearby Reno, Sparks and Fernley will likely be
big beneficiaries of the jobs and money brought to town by Tesla.
"Our grocery stores are going to do well. Our clothing stores are
going to do well," said Reno mayor Bob Cashell. "They're going to
live here."
Cashell views his town as the last outpost of a megalopolis that
begins 220 miles away in San Francisco, and includes Sacramento and
Reno. Many residents once lived in the San Francisco Bay Area or in
Sacramento, and in its heyday Reno relied on visitors from the most
populous U.S. state to gamble in its casinos.
But as in Atlantic City and Las Vegas, casinos in Reno declined as
gaming became legal in other places, dropping from 25 percent of the
economy to about 8 percent, said Mike Kazmierski, president of the
Economic Development Authority of Western Nevada.
"Our casino gaming industry has stabilized and they are slowly
coming out of the recession, but they will not return to the levels
they were at years ago when Nevada was the only state where you
could gamble legally," Kasmierski said.
At dusk on a recent
weeknight, Reno's trademark neon sign glowed pink and gold, standing
out against the blue-gray sky like a living painting.
But few people were out, and several casinos looked as if they could
use a paint job.
The biggest action was at a new hotel, the Whitney Peak, which has
no casino and features a climbing wall where guests can hoist
themselves up the side of the building in the neon glow.
John Nielsen, 48, felt the decline of gaming here when he lost his
job as an engineer with a slot machine company. He hopes there will
be a job for him in the new Reno, but with two sons to support and
the Tesla plant's opening at least two years away, Nielsen fears any
boom will come too late for him.
“I see Tesla as being a fantastic employer in the future,” said
Nielsen, who is considering looking for work in other states. “I
don’t see it as doing anything for me right now.”
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein, editing by John Pickering)
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