LANSING — Michigan notched a win with Ford Motor Co.'s decision to build a $3.5 billion, 2,500-job electric vehicle battery factory in Marshall.
But the deal, more pieces of which lawmakers could finalize as soon as Wednesday, will not come cheap.
The state will provide significantly more money for the project than for other major business expansions announced since the creation of a new fund to lure companies 15 months ago.
The cost is expected to total $1.7 billion, or about $693,000 a job, or $1 billion and $384,000 per job if only cash, but not a special tax break, is factored in.
The spending will be far more than what is being disbursed for other top projects benefiting from the Strategic Outreach and Attraction Reserve Fund or, in some cases, a direct appropriation enacted into law by the Legislature and Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. The account was formed in late 2021 after Dearborn-based Ford chose to locate EV assembly and battery plants in Tennessee and Kentucky.
"I believe that we paid a premium for Ford to tell a good story, which is: 'We created this fund because we lost Ford, and now we've attracted Ford.' But the issue is at what cost? That's $1.7 billion of benefits they received, totaling $725,000 a job, which is way out of whack with what we paid" for other agreements, said House Minority Leader Matt Hall, a Republican from Kalamazoo County's Richland Township and a critic of the deal.