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Friday, August 14, 2009

City to Host Korean Electric Car Company

Ah...could this be another reason no one reached out to the american company TESLA Motors...


MEDIA ADVISORY
and Photo Op

City of Long Beach Greets
Electronic Vehicle Manufacturer
Friday, August 14, 4:00 pm

City officials will greet executives from a Korean electric car company that is touring the City of Long Beach as it seeks to establish a Headquarters/Research and Development site in Southern California.

CT&T Motors, which currently has manufacturing facilities in South Korea and China, expects to hire more than 400 people and projects annual sales of $500 million within four years of opening its Southern California Headquarters.

The City of Long Beach benefits from its location and a strong, diverse workforce, and is using a host of incentives to recruit manufacturers to the city to improve its economic base by generating jobs and tax revenue.

WHO:
Young Gi Lee, CT&T President and CEO
Robert Swayze, Manager, Economic Development and Cultural Affairs
Bill Allen, President and CEO, Los Angeles Economic Development Corporation

WHAT:
The photo op will feature one CT&T e-Zone Electric Vehicle, which are sold in more than 15 countries, including the United States. According to CT&T, this is the only Neighborhood Electric Vehicles (NEV) that have passed the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards crash test standards for front impacts and the European New Car Assessment Program standards for side impacts.

WHEN:
Friday, August 14, 2009, 4:00 pm

WHERE :
City Hall Plaza, directly in front of City Hall, 333 W. Ocean Blvd.
# # #

Ed Kamlan
City Manager's Office
City of Long Beach
333 W. Ocean Blvd.
Long Beach, CA 90802
562.570.6814
edward.kamlan@longbeach.gov

"You're the first official from Long Beach to tell me the City wants TESLA to be there."

Even though the Mayor and City Manager have included in the current budget projections TESLA Motors as a source of revenue for the City of Long Beach, I have been unable to get specific information from the City Manager about what exactly has been done to attract TESLA Motors to relocate to Long Beach to produce electric vehicles.

And because the Council rejected my proposal last year to establish a "red team" that would pull out the stops to attract new jobs to Long Beach, I called the President of TESLA Motors, Eldon Musk yesterday afternoon on a hunch that nothing has been done to get TESLA here.

I was shocked when Mr. Musk told me "you're the first official from Long Beach to tell me that the city wants TESLA Motors to relocate there to produce electric vehicles."

That's right. No one has even bothered to reach out to TESLA.

Mr. Musk told me that the Mayor won't return his calls because lower level staff at the City have made it clear the Mayor doesn't want any other business courted for the Boeing property except a movie studio. Really. This matches what the City Manager told me when I asked why nothing had been done to reach out to TESLA and the City Manager said "staff decided a movie studio would be better at the property."

I don't recall the City Council directing staff to do this...which is why I put the issue on the agenda last Tuesday. Someone has to publicly explain why we might lose the 1,000 jobs TESLA would bring.

Oh, that's the other part of my conversation. Mr. Musk says they want to come to Long Beach and manufacture 20,000 electric vehicles and produce 1,000 jobs. But they are looking elsewhere because no one at Long Beach seems interested.

I asked him what he needs. He didn't ask for land, or redevelopment money as I had been told by staff that he had. He said the biggest problem will be getting through City Planning and Building and environmental review but because they are building electric cars they believe that will be a plus.

I asked him if he was aware that the airport area is in our "enterprise zone" and that TESLA could receive tax credits for every person hired at a Long Beach plant. He said "no one told us."

Who is TESLA? According to their website:
Based in California’s Silicon Valley, Tesla Motors is the only automaker in the world manufacturing and selling highway-capable EVs. The company's goal is to produce increasingly affordable cars to mainstream buyers – relentlessly driving down the cost of EV technology. Tesla also sells patented powertrain components to other automakers.
Oh and by the way, the US Department of Energy thinks TESLA has a bright future which is why...

Tesla gets loan approval from US Department of Energy

Electric vehicle manufacturer will use loans to build an assembly plant for Model S sedan and another facility to manufacture electric powertrains.

June 23, 2009

SAN CARLOS, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE) —Tesla Motors has received approval for about $465 million in low-interest loans from the US Department of Energy to accelerate the production of affordable, fuel-efficient electric vehicles.

Tesla will use $365 million for production engineering and assembly of the Model S, an all-electric family sedan that carries seven people and travels up to 300 miles per charge.

The Model S has an anticipated base price of $49,900 after a $7,500 US federal tax credit. It has lifetime ownership costs equivalent to a conventional car with a sticker price of $35,000, thanks to the lower cost of electricity vs. gasoline and a relative lack of service and maintenance. Tesla expects to start Model S production in late 2011 in a state-of-the-art assembly plant employing about 1,000 workers.

Tesla will use $100 million for a powertrain manufacturing plant. The facility will supply all-electric powertrain solutions to other automakers, greatly accelerating the availability of mass-market EVs. The new facility will employ about 650 people.

Tesla is in the final stages of negotiation for facilities in California.

Gee, just think if this kind of nonsense continues, Long Beach may soon have its own version of the movie "Who Killed the Electric Car."

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Police Chief Tony Batts Leaves Long Beach Day After Budget Presentation

I just received news that Long Beach Police Chief Tony Batts is leaving Long Beach just the day after he presented a budget to the City Council that included serious cuts to police services.

He will be the new Police Chief of Oakland.

First of all, good luck to Chief Batts. Oakland has serious problems and they need serious help.

Secondly, I understand our City Manager knew about his potential leaving and failed to tell the City Council -- especially as we listened to the outgoing Chief's serious cuts to a department he will no longer command.

So, now the City of Long Beach needs to get in place a new Police Chief that will stand up to management and not allow his department to be cut.

www.savestation18.com

Take a look at www.savestation18.com to see the latest on why closure of our Station 18 is a bad idea of Mayor Foster. His proposals to cut fire and police services in the upcoming budget are wrong...dead wrong.

I am having a community budget meeting next week on Wed. August 19th at 6pm at the El Dorado Senior Center, 2800 N. Studebaker. Come out and give the City Manager an ear-full about what you think about cutting police and fire services.