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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Missouri governor signs Boeing tax deal

Boeing’s new family of 777X jetliners, the 777-9X, top, and 777-8X are shown in an artist’s concept. Boeing currently has more than a dozen states in competition from coast to coast hoping that Boeing will choose them to assemble its new 777X jetliner. (Associated Press)
Alan Scher Zagier Associated Press

ST. LOUIS – Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon chose a monument to the space race manufacturing boon of a half-century ago as a backdrop Tuesday to sign into law a $1.7 billion tax incentive package created in a bid to lure aerospace giant Boeing to the state.

The Democratic governor endorsed the tax breaks for production of the company’s “next generation” 777X passenger plane at a bill signing ceremony at the James S. McDonnell Planetarium in Forest Park, part of the St. Louis Science Center. The 50-year-old planetarium’s namesake founded the McDonnell Aircraft Corp., which later became McDonnell Douglas, was based at Lambert-International Airport in St. Louis before its 1997 merger with rival Boeing and played a key role in the efforts leading to manned spaceflights.

“Just as workers right here in St. Louis helped our nation reach for the stars by building the Mercury space capsules a half century ago, today we send clear message that Missouri is ready to open the next great chapter for high-tech aerospace manufacturing in our state,” Nixon told more than 100 civic and business leaders, state and local politicians, community college presidents and labor organizers as he stood in front of two NASA space shuttles on display at the museum.

The ceremony came hours before Boeing’s self-imposed deadline for offers from eager local and state governments across the country. The presumed Missouri manufacturing site would be on the edge of the airport in St. Louis County. The tax credits are worth up to $150 million annually over 23 years, if Boeing meets its target of 8,000 new jobs.

Missouri lawmakers swiftly approved the incentive package during a one-week special session last week that saw little opposition from either side of the political aisle. Boeing Co. currently builds military aircraft at its site near Lambert and employs about 15,000 people in Missouri.

The company requested proposals from more than a dozen locations for 777X production after a machinists’ union in Washington state last month rejected a proposed contract seeking to replace their traditional pension with a defined contribution savings plan. While the company can still choose to remain in the Pacific Northwest, Nixon said he doesn’t expect that to happen.

On Monday night, the St. Louis County Council unanimously approved a local package that could add up to $1.8 billion more in tax incentives to the overall offer. St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay was among those who spoke in support of the project at that meeting, and County Executive Charlie Dooley sounded similarly optimistic Tuesday.

“We showed the world that St. Louis is prepared,” Dooley said in an interview after Nixon’s remarks. “I believe we are going to be successful.”

Chicago-based Boeing is expected to announce the plant’s location early next year. The proposed incentives would come from an expansion of four existing state programs that base the amount of aid on the number of jobs businesses add.

“This is not a guarantee we will succeed,” Nixon noted. “But boy oh boy, a guarantee that we would fail is if we didn’t compete when these transformational opportunities came.”