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Electrolux to Pay Back TN Incentives

Memphis, Shelby County and the state of Tennessee gave about $150 million in financial incentives to Electrolux for the factory.

In this Thursday, Jan. 9, 2014, file photo, workers assemble ovens at the new Electrolux home cooking appliance factory in Memphis, Tenn. Electrolux says it is stopping production at its Memphis, Tennessee, factory while investing $250 million in a separate facility in the state. The Stockholm-based maker of Frigidaire products said Thursday that it is consolidating all U.S. cooking manufacturing into its facility in Springfield.
In this Thursday, Jan. 9, 2014, file photo, workers assemble ovens at the new Electrolux home cooking appliance factory in Memphis, Tenn. Electrolux says it is stopping production at its Memphis, Tennessee, factory while investing $250 million in a separate facility in the state. The Stockholm-based maker of Frigidaire products said Thursday that it is consolidating all U.S. cooking manufacturing into its facility in Springfield.
AP Photo/Adrian Sainz, File

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — Swedish appliance maker Electrolux has agreed to pay taxes on a factory the company has decided to shut down in Memphis, Tennessee, officials said Friday.

Electrolux said Thursday that it plans to stop production within two years at its Memphis factory while investing $250 million to consolidate U.S. cooking manufacturing into its Springfield, Tennessee, facility.

Memphis, Shelby County and the state of Tennessee gave about $150 million in financial incentives to Electrolux for the factory. Electrolux once said it would employ 1,200 people at the factory, which opened in 2014 and makes ovens. It currently employs about 530 people, who will have to look for jobs after the plant closes.

Incentives included a 15-year property tax abatement program and a $95 million cash grant from the state, Memphis officials said. Memphis Mayor Jim Strickland and Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris met with Electrolux on Friday and the company agreed to pay the "full taxable amount," Strickland said in a statement. The amount was not disclosed.

State Sen. Brian Kelsey, a lawmaker representing parts of Memphis and Shelby County, said in a statement that he has sent a letter to Gov. Bill Lee expressing his concerns about the plant closing. Kelsey said he thinks the state should join Memphis and the county "in recuperating public incentives provided to Electrolux."

"This loss for Memphis should prompt careful review of the use of taxpayer dollars for similar incentives in the future," Kelsey said in a statement.

Electrolux did not return a call seeking comment.

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