An arm of the New York
City Economic Development Corp. Tuesday approved the sale of close to
$200 million in tax-exempt bonds to help JetBlue build an expansion to
its Terminal 5 at John F. Kennedy International Airport.
The New
York City Industrial Development Agency’s board of directors voted
11-1-0 to approve the sale of $194 million in private activity bonds the
Long Island City-based airline will use to finance the terminal’s
150,000-square-foot addition, which will serve as the new gateway for
its international arrivals.
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The IDA calculated
that the $6 million in tax revenue the city will forego from the sale of
the bonds will be offset by about $250 million in taxes generated by
the facility over the next 25 years.
The total project cost was
placed at around $240 million, with $140 million set aside for
construction costs and the remainder going to soft costs and fees. The
development agency estimated the interest rate would be between 6.5
percent and 7.5 percent for the 30-year term of the bonds.
JetBlue
projects it will add 396 new, full-time employees starting at $25,000 a
year with benefits by the time the addition is up and running in early
2015 and 67 part-time employees.
Missing from the application was
the number of contracted workers at the airport, which raised concern
with IDA board member Kevin Doyle, the executive vice president of the
service workers’ union 32BJ-SEIU..
“There are, however, the
conditions of thousands of contracted employees who are making at or
close to the minimum wage with no benefits,” he said. “Those conditions
should be examined as well as part of the presentation to get an
accurate picture.”
Doyle abstained from voting.
In 2008,
JetBlue’s Terminal 5 was the first at JFK to be designed and built after
Sept. 11, 2001. The 635,000-square-foot facility features 26 gates
spread out through three concourses and with 20 security lanes, it was
the largest checkpoint in a U.S. airline terminal.
In October,
the airline broke ground on what it calls T5i, a 150,000-square-foot
addition where the former Terminal 6 sat that will include dedicated
gates for JetBlue’s international arrivals as well as a new customs and
immigration checkpoint.
International flights currently arrive at Terminal 4.
JetBlue
received similar tax-exempt financing through the IDA in 2003 for
demolition of JFK’s old Building 179 and the construction of the
airline’s 100,000-square-foot Hangar 81.
When the company was
considering moving its headquarters from Forest Hills to Florida in
2009, the EDC put together a package of incentives, including $7 million
in tax exemptions through the IDA to renovate what would become
JetBlue’s Long Island City headquarters.
The deal also included
branding rights with the “I Love NY” campaign and officially named
JetBlue as “New York’s Hometown Airline.”
http://www.timesledger.com
http://www.jetblue.com
http://www.panynj.gov/airports/jfk.html
http://www.airnav.com/airport/JFK
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