Reports of Amazon's HQ2 Split Raise Questions about Financial Incentives
*By Amanda Weston*
Reports that Amazon may split its new headquarters between two locations is raising questions about the financial incentives offered by those cities bidding to become the new hub.
“One of the questions that I’m left with following this reporting that there might be two cities instead of just one ... is whether this will change the incentives that some of the cities are offering in their draft plan,” Axios reporter Shannon Vavra told Cheddar Tuesday.
The New York Times [reported Monday](https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/05/technology/amazon-second-headquarters-split.html) that Amazon ($AMZN) plans to split the much-anticipated HQ2 between the Long Island City neighborhood of Queens, N.Y. and Washington, D.C. suburb Crystal City, Va.
“For instance, does it make it like less of an incentive for Amazon to go to New York because instead of offering 50,000 jobs, they’ll only be able to offer about 25,000 jobs? Does that change the incentive exchange there?”
The Times also reported New York offered Amazon potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies. Governor Andrew Cuomo said he is doing everything he can to encourage the deal and called the incentive package “great.”
Maryland has offered incentives added up to about $8.5 billion, [according to The Washington Post](https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/amazon-in-advanced-talks-about-putting-hq2-in-northern-virginia-those-close-to-process-say/2018/11/02/9be831d6-d7c0-11e8-aeb7-ddcad4a0a54e_story.html?utm_term=.57bfd1f1e799).
The Wall Street Journal [wrote Monday](https://www.wsj.com/articles/amazon-plans-to-split-hq2-evenly-between-two-cities-1541446552?mod=hp_lead_pos1) the decision to split HQ2 is to give Amazon the opportunity to hire more top tech talent in both areas. It also reduces impacts on housing and transit with only 25,000 employees in each city versus 50,000 in one.
“The reason they’re looking for a second headquarters is because they weren’t able to keep up with the capacity that local talent was able to offer at the time,” Vavra said of Amazon’s main Seattle location.
Amazon already has a presence in both alleged HQ2 cities. Vavra said there are currently about 1,000 employees in New York and 2,000 in the Arlington and D.C. area.
“There’s also a lot of folks online who are giving Amazon flack for not necessarily considering cities and locations that are more rural and considered mid-America where a job injection could be particularly helpful,” Vavra said.
Amazon has not confirmed any of the reports. The Journal reported Amazon could announce its choice ー or choices ー as early as this week.
For full interview [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/a-tale-of-two-hq2-cities).
A.I.-based entertainment company, Deedub, recently raised
$20 million in a Series A round, led by Insight Partners. Deepdub uses A.I. technology to automate the dubbing process for foreign-language movies or TV shows, while using actors' original voices. The company says it can take just two to three minutes of data from an actor's voice and transform the voice into a different language. The funding comes as foreign-language films and shows like Netflix's 'Squid Game' have recently become more popular with audiences in the U.S. and around the world. Oz Krakowski, Chief Revenue Officer at Deepdub, joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss.
Energy Vault, the company developing sustainable, grid-scale energy storage solutions, is now trading on the New York Stock Exchange following the completion of its business combination with Novus Capital Corporation II. Energy Vault develops sustainable, grid-scale energy storage solutions designed to advance the transition to a carbon free, resilient power grid. Robert Piconi, co-founder and CEO of Energy Vault, joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell to disucss.
A new mobile app has launched just in time for Valentine's Day. Our.Love bills itself as an A.I.-powered, gamified, relationship wellness app for couples. The app is set in what the company calls the Coupleverse, a virtual world where each couple can build a virtual relationship home as they also build their real-world relationship. Founder and CEO Tal Zlotnitsky joined Cheddar to discuss how the app works. "The concept behind Our.Love is to give people the opportunity to understand where they stand in their relationship through very simple metrics that we provide within the app that will help them in real-time, see where they stand, see where their partner is, and be able to get closer together," he said.
Alyson Wilson, VP of Brand Innovation at Alo Yoga, joins Cheddar News to discuss the yoga apparel company entering the metaverse and teaming up with Spring Studios for New York Fashion Week.
The 21st Annual Food Network and Cooking Channel South Beach Wine & Food Festival (SOBEWFF), is returning to Miami on February 24 with proceeds to benefit the future leaders of the hospitality industry. Lee Schrager, the founder and director of the festival, and Food Network star Jeff Mauro joined Cheddar News to discuss what ticket holders can expect, how the festival benefits students, and how Mauro will be paying tribute to fellow food celebrity, Guy Fieri, by hosting a charity auction dinner. "I mean there's nobody bigger, nobody more magnetic right now in the food space than Guy," Maura said. "I mean the guy had a Super Bowl commercial on last night. That's a dream of mine, so I'm one step closer there just by doing a tight 20 minutes at his tribute dinner."