3049 westway drive edwardsville il 62025
Found Anya Covington y’all she’s a Basketball coach trainer.
2023.06.04 08:17 ThatgurlS Found Anya Covington y’all she’s a Basketball coach trainer.
submitted by ThatgurlS to PowerTV [link] [comments]
2023.05.06 22:21 TwitchSTL Cloud9 Edwardsville - Grand Opening Haul
2023.05.01 07:44 Murky_Calligrapher83 These are the nutrition facts for my chocolate milk from school
2023.02.03 04:21 Bumclicks List of Amazon FCs
Amazon Fulfillment Centers Located in the US
Arizona
#PHX5 – 16920 W. Commerce Dr, Goodyear, AZ, 85338
#AZA5 – 6000 W Van Buren St, Phoenix, AZ 85043
#PHX3 – 6835 W. Buckeye Rd, Phoenix, AZ, 85043
#PHX6 – 4750 W. Mohave St, Phoenix, AZ, 85043
#PHX7 & PHX8 – 800 N. 75th Ave, Phoenix, AZ, 85043
#SAZ1 – 3333 S 7th St, Phoenix, AZ 85040-1182
#TFC1 – 5050 W. Mohave St, Phoenix, AZ 85043
#TUS1 – 533 W Lower Buckeye Rd, Phoenix, Arizona, 85043
#UAZ1 – 500 S 48th St, Phoenix, AZ 85034
#PHX9 – 777 S 79th Ave, Tolleson, Arizona, 85353
#TUS2 – 6701 S. Kolb Rd, Tucson, AZ 85756
#GYR1 – 580 South 143rd Avenue, Goodyear, AZ 85338
#GYR3 – 8181 W Roosevelt St., Phoenix, AZ 85043
#PHX8 – 800 N. 75th Ave Phoenix, AZ, 85043
#VAZ1 – 3333 S 7th St., Phoenix, AZ 85040
Arkansas
#DLR1 – 1920 N Locust St, North Little Rock, AR 72114
#LIT1 – 7001 Zeuber Rd, Little Rock, AR 72206
#LIT2 – 13001 US-70, North Little Rock, AR 72117
California
#BFL1 – 1601 Petrol Rd, Bakersfield, CA 93308
#PSP1 – 1010 West Fourth St, Beaumont, CA 92223
#DCA2 – 5250 Goodman Rd, Eastvale, CA 91752
#LGB3 – 4590 Goodman Way, Building 1, Eastvale, CA 91752
#SNA6/SNA9/DCA2 – 5250 Goodman Rd, Eastvale, CA 92880
#LAX9 – 11263 Oleander Ave, Building 1, Fontana, CA 92337
#FAT1 – 3575 S Orange Ave, Fresno, CA 93725
#LGB1 – 2417 E. Carson St, Long Beach, CA 90810
#SCK3 – 3565 N Airport Way, Manteca, CA 95336
#ONT6/HLA3 – 24208 San Michele Rd, Moreno Valley, CA 92551
#LGB4 – 27517 Pioneer Ave, Redlands, CA 92374
#ONT9 – 2125 W. San Bernardino Ave, Redlands, CA 92374
#LGB6 – 20901 Krameria Ave, Riverside, CA 92518
#LGB7 – 1660 N. Locust Ave, Rialto, CA 92376
#SNA4 – 2496 W Walnut St, Rialto, CA 92376-3009
#OAK3 – 255 Park Center Dr, Patterson, CA 95363
#LGB9 – 4375 N Perris Blvd, Perris, CA 92571
#SMF1 – 4900 W Elkhorn Blvd, Metro Air Park, Sacramento, CA 95835
#ONT2/3/4/7 – 1910 & 2020 E Central Ave. San Bernardino, CA 92408
#PCA2 – 1650 East Central Ave, San Bernardino, CA 92408
#SNA7/SNA8/LGB5/KRB1 – 555 East Orange Show Rd, San Bernardino, CA 92408
#SCK1 – 4611 Newcastle Rd, Stockton, CA 95215
#SMF3 – 4723 S B St, Stockton, CA 95215
#XUSD – 1909 Zephyr St, Stockton, CA 95206
#DPS3 – 2405 Conejo Spectrum St, Thousand Oaks, CA 91320
#OAK4/OAK6 – 1555 N. Chrisman Rd, Tracy, CA 95304
#PCA1 – 1565 N MacArthur Dr, Tracy, CA 95376
#SJC7 – 188 Mountain House Pkwy, Tracy, CA 95391
Colorado
#DDV5 2889 Himalaya Dr, Aurora, CO 80011
#DEN2 – 24006 E. 19th Ave, Aurora, CO 80019
#DEN5 – 19799 E 36th Dr, Aurora, CO 80011
#DCS3 – 4303 Grinnell Blvd, Colorado Springs, CO 80925
#DEN3 – 14601 Grant St, Thornton, CO 80023
Connecticut
#BDL1 – 801 Day Hill Road Windsor, CT 06095
#BDL3 – 415 Washington Ave, Building 3, North Haven, CT 06473
#BDL2 – 200 Old Iron Ore Rd, Windsor, CT 06095
#BDL4 – 1221 Kennedy Rd, Windsor, CT 06095
#BDL5 – 29 Research Parkway, Wallingford, CT 06492
Delaware
#PHL7/PHL9 – 560 Merrimac Ave, Middletown, DE 19709
#PHL8 – 727 N. Broad St, Middletown, DE 19709
#PHL1 – 1 Centerpoint Blvd, New Castle, DE 19720
#PHL3 – 1600 Johnson Way, New Castle, DE 19720
Florida
#MCO5 – 305 Deen Still Rd, Davenport, FL 33897
#MCO9 – 2841 Access Rd, Davenport, FL 33897
#JAX2 – 12900 Pecan Park Rd, Jacksonville, FL 32218
#JAX3 – 13333 103rd St, Cecil Commerce Center, Jacksonville, FL 32221
#JAX5 – 4948 Bulls Bay Hwy, Jacksonville, FL 32219
#TPA2/#LAL1 – 1760 County Line Rd, Lakeland, FL, 33811
#MIA1– 14000 NW 37th Ave, Opa Locka, FL 33054
#MCO1– 12340 Boggy Creek Rd, Orlando, FL 32824
#UFL4/SFL1 – 7469 Kingspointe Pkwy, Orlando, FL 32819
#TPA1 – 3350 Laurel Ridge Ave, Ruskin, FL 33570
Georgia
#PGA1 – 6200 Fulton Industrial Blvd, Atlanta, GA 30336
#MGE1/MGE7 – 650 Broadway Ave, Braselton, GA 30517
#ATL6 – 4200 N Commerce Dr, East Point, GA 30344
#MGE3 – 808 Hog Mountain Rd, Building F, Jefferson, GA, 30549
#ATL8 – 2201 Thornton Rd, Lithia Springs, GA 30122
#SAV3 – 7001 Skipper Rd, Macon, GA 31216
#ATL2 – 2255 W Park Blvd, Stone Mountain, GA 30087
#ATL7 – 6855 Shannon Pkwy S, Union City, GA 30291
Idaho
#BOI2 – 5319 E Franklin Rd, Nampa, ID 83687
Illinois
#MDW9 – 2865 Duke Pkwy, Aurora, IL 60502
#ORD2 – 23714 W Amoco Rd, Channahon, IL 60410
#ORD9 – 23700 W Bluff Rd Bldg A, Channahon, IL 60410
#MDW5 – 16825 Churnovic Ln, Crest Hill, IL 60435
#STL4– 3050 Gateway Commerce Center Dr S, Edwardsville, IL
#STL6/STL7/HLU1– 3931 Lakeview Corporate Dr, Edwardsville, IL 62025
#MDW4 – 250 or 201 Emerald Dr, Joliet, IL 60433
#PIL1 – 801 Midpoint Rd, Minooka, Illinois 60047
#MDW7 – 6605 or 6521 W Monee Manhattan Rd, Monee, IL 60449
#MDW6 – 1125 W Remington Blvd, Romeoville, IL 60446
#DIL7 – 3601 Howard St, Skokie, IL 60076
#MDW8 – 1750 Bridge Dr, Waukegan, IL 60085
#MDW8 – 1750 Bridge Dr, Waukegan, IL 60085
#HMW1 – 30260 Graaskamp Blvd, Wilmington, IL 60481
Indiana
#IND9 – 2140 Stacie’s Way, Greenwood, IN 46143
#IND4/IND8 – 710 South Girls School Rd, Indianapolis, IN 46214
#IND7 – 9101 Orly Dr, Indianapolis, IN 46241
#PIN1 – 6161 Decatur Blvd, Indianapolis, IN 46241
#DIN1 – 5850 W 80th St, Indianapolis, IN 46278
#SDF8 – 900 Patrol Rd, Jeffersonville, IN 47130
#IND2/#IND3 – 715 Airtech Pkwy, Plainfield, IN 46168
#IND5 – 800 S Perry Rd Plainfield, IN 46168
#DIN3 – #200, 5545 Chet Waggoner Ct, South Bend, IN 46628
#XUSE – 5100 S Indianapolis Rd, Whitestown, IN 46075
#IND1 – 4255 Anson Blvd, Whitestown, IN 46075
Iowa
#DSM5 – 500 SW 32nd St, Bondurant, IN 50009
Kansas
#MKC4 – 19645 Waverly Rd, Edgerton, KS 66021
#MKC6 – 6925 Riverview Ave., Kansas City, KS 66102
#MCI5 – 16851 W 113th St, Lenexa, KS 66219
Kentucky
#SDF1 – 1105 S Columbia Ave, Campbellsville, KY 42718
#IVSA – 4620 Olympic Blvd, Erlanger, KY 41018
#CVG8 – 7968 Kentucky Dr, Suites 2-3, Florence, KY 41042
#CVG1 – 1155 Worldwide Blvd, Hebron, KY 41048
#CVG2 – 1600 Worldwide Blvd, Hebron, KY 41048
#CVG3 – 3680 Langley Dr, Hebron, KY 41048
#IVSB/#HCN1 – LogistiCenter 275 #2, 3521 Point Pleasant Rd, Hebron, KY 41048
#LEX1/LEX3 – 1850 Mercer Rd, Lexington, KY 40511
#LEX2 – 172 Trade St, Lexington, Kentucky, 40511
#SDF2 – 4360 Robards Ln, Louisville, KY 40218
#SDF4 – 376 Zappos.com Blvd, Shepherdsville, KY 40165
#SDF6 – 271 Omega Pkwy, Shepherdsville, KY 40165
#SDF7 – 300 Omicron Ct, Shepherdsville, KY 40165
#SDF9 – 100 W. Thomas P. Echols Lane, Shepherdsville, KY 40165
Maryland
#HBA1 – 1100 Woodley Rd, Aberdeen, MD 21001
#BWI2 – 2010 Broening Hwy, Baltimore, MD 21224
#HSE1 – 13905 Crayton Blvd, Hagerstown, MD 21742
#MDT2 – 600 Principio Pkwy West, North East, MD 21901
#DCA1 – 1700 Sparrows Point Blvd, Sparrows Point, MD 21219
Massachusetts
#DBO2 – 500 Sprague St, Dedham, MA 02026
#BOS7 – 1180 Innovation Way, Fall River, MA 02722
#BOS5 – 1000 Technology Center Dr, Stoughton, MA 02072
Michigan
#DTW5 – 19991 Brownstown Center Dr, Brownstown Charter Township, MI 48183
#GRR1 – 4500 68th St. SE, Caledonia, MI 49316
#DET1 – 39000 Amrhein Rd, Livonia, MI 48150
#DTW1 – 32801 Ecorse Rd, Romulus, MI 48174
#DET2 – 50500 Mound Rd, Shelby Township, MI 48317
Minnesota
#MSP9 – 9001 Wyoming Ave N, Brooklyn Park, MN 55445
#MSP1 – 2601 4th Ave E, Shakopee, MN 55379
Mississippi
#MEM2 – 191 Norfolk Southern Way, Chickasaw Trail Industrial Park, Byhalia, MS 38611
#MEM6 – 11505 Progress Way, Olive Branch, MS 38654
Missouri
#DLI1 – Hazelwood, MO 63042
#STL8 – 4000 Premier Pkwy, St. Peters, MO 63376
Nevada
#LAS1 – 12300 Bermuda Rd, Henderson, NV 89044
#LAS2 – 3837 Bay Lake Trail Suite 115, North Las Vegas, NV 89030
#LAS6 – 4550 Nexus Way, North Las Vegas, NV 89115
#LAS7 – 6001 E. Tropical Pkwy, North Las Vegas, NV 89115
#RNO4 – 8000 N Virginia St, Reno, NV 89506
#RNO3 – 555 Milan Dr, Sparks, NV 89434
New Hampshire
#BOS1 – 10 State St Nashua, NH 03063
New Jersey
#EWR6/EWR7 – 275 Omar Ave, Avenel, NJ 07001
#ACY2 – 1101 E. Pearl St, Burlington, NJ 08016
#EWR9 & #LGA6 – 8003 Industrial Ave. Carteret, NJ 07008
#LGA7 – 380 Middlesex Ave, Carteret, NJ 07008
#TEB6 – 22 Hightstown-Cranbury Station Rd, Cranbury, NJ 08512
#LGA9 – 2170 State Route 27, Edison, NJ 08817
#TEB3 – 2651 Oldmans Creek Rd, Logan Township, NJ 08085
#EWR1 – 50 New Canton Way Robbinsville, NJ 08691
#EWR4 – 50 New Canton Way, Robbinsville, NJ 08691
#EWR8 – 698 Route 46 West, Teterboro, NJ 07608
#ACY1 – 240 Mantua Grove Rd, West Deptford, NJ 08066
New York
#BUF5– 4201 Walden Ave, Lancaster, NY 14086
#SYR1 – 7211 Morgan Rd, Liverpool, NY 13090
#JFK8/DYY6 – 546 Gulf Ave, Staten Island, NY 10314
North Carolina
#CLT4 – 8000 Tuckaseegee Rd, Charlotte, NC 28214
#CLT9 – 3620 Reeves Ridge Dr, Charlotte, NC 28214
#CLT3 – 6500 Davidson Hwy 2532, Concord, NC 28027
#CTL5 – 1745 Derita Rd, Concord, NC 28027
#RDU5 – 1805 TW Alexander Dr, Durham, NC 27703
#RDU1 – 4851 Jones Sausage Rd, Garner, NC 27529
#GSO1 – 1656 Snow Bridge Ln, Kernersville, NC 27284
Ohio
#AKC1 – 2450 Romig Rd, Akron, OH 44320
#CMH1 – 11903 National Rd SW, Etna, OH 43062
#CLE3 – 1155 Babbitt Rd, Euclid, OH 44132
#CMH6/HCM1 – 3538 TradePort Ct, Building 2, Lockbourne, OH 43137
#CMH3 – 700 Gateway Blvd, Monroe, OH 45050
#CLE2 – 21500 Emery Rd, North Randall, OH 44128
#CMH2 – 6050 Gateway Ct, Obetz, OH 43125
#POH1 – 3880 Groveport Rd, Obetz, OH 43207
#CLE5 – 8685 Independence Pkwy, Twinsburg, OH 44087
#CMH4 – 1550 W Main St, West Jefferson, OH 43162
Oklahoma
#OKC1 – 9201 S. Portland Ave, Oklahoma City, OK 73159
#DOK1 – 4401C E Hefner Rd, Oklahoma City, OK 73131
#OKC5 – 1414 S Council Rd, Oklahoma City, OK 73179
#TUL2 – 11920 E 43rd St N, Tulsa, OK 74116
Oregon
#PDX5 – 5647 NE Huffman St, Hillsboro, OR 97124
#PDX6/HPD1 – 15000 N Lombard St, Multnomah, Portland, OR 97203
#PDX7 – 4775 Depot Ct SE, Salem, OR 97317
#PDX9 – 1250 NW Swigert Way, Troutdale, OR 97060
Pennsylvania
#ABE1/ABE2 – 705 Boulder Dr, Breinigsville, PA 18031
#ABE3 – 650 Boulder Dr, Breinigsville, PA 18031
#MDT1 – 2 Ames Dr, Carlisle, PA 17015
#PHL4 – 21 Roadway Dr, Carlisle, PA 17015
#PHL6 – 675 Allen Rd, Carlisle, PA 17015
#XUSC – 40 Logistics Dr, Carlisle, PA 17013
#ABE4 – 1610 Van Buren Rd, Easton, PA 18045
#AVP2/AVP3 – 298 1st Ave, Gouldsboro, PA 18424
#ABE5 – 6455 Allentown Blvd, Harrisburg, PA 17112
#AVP1 – 550 Oak Ridge Rd, Hazleton, PA 18202
#PIT2 – 1200 Westport Rd, Imperial, PA 15126
#PHL5 – 500 McCarthy Dr, Lewisberry, PA 17339
#PPA1 – 545 Oak Hill Rd, Mountaintop, PA 18707
#PIT5 – 2250 Roswell Dr, Pittsburgh, PA 15205
#AVP6 – 1 Commerce Rd, Pittston, PA 18640
#AVP8 – 250 Enterprise Way, Pittston, PA 18640
#DPP1 – 501 North Dr, Sewickley, PA 15143
South Carolina
#GSP1 – 402 John Dodd Rd, Spartanburg, SC 29303
#CAE1 – 4400 12th St Extension, West Columbia, SC 29172
Tennessee
#CHA1 – 7200 Discovery Dr Chattanooga, TN 37421 – Hamilton County
#CHA2 – 225 Infinity Dr NW, Charleston, TN 37310 – Bradley County
#BNA1 – 14840 Central Pike, Lebanon, TN 37090 – Wilson County
#BNA2 – 500 Duke Dr, Lebanon, TN 37090 – Wilson County
#MEM5 – 5155 Citation Dr, Memphis, TN 38118
#BNA3 – 2020 Joe B Jackson Pkwy, Murfreesboro, TN 37127
#BNA5 – 50 Airways Blvd, Nashville, TN 37217
#STN1 – 10 Dell Pkwy, Nashville, TN 37217
#DNA1 – 2813 Brick Church Pike, Nashville, TN 37207
Texas
#STX2 – 1625 Hutton Dr, Carrollton, TX 75006
#DFW6 – 940 W Bethel Rd Coppell, TX 75019
#FTW2/HDA1 – 2701 W Bethel Rd, Coppell, TX
#FTW6 – 2601 W Bethel Rd, Grapevine (Coppell), TX 75261
#FTW7/FTW9 – 944 W. Sandy Lake Rd, Coppell, TX 75019
#DDA8 – 8901 Forney Rd, Dallas, TX 75227
#DFW1 & DFW8 – 2700 Regent Blvd, Dallas, TX 75261
#DAL3 – 1301 Chalk Hill Rd, Dallas, TX 75211
#FTW8 – 3351 Balmorhea Dr. Dallas, TX 75241
#IAH1 – 9155 Southlink Dr, Dallas, TX 75241
#DFW7 – 700 Westport Pkwy, Fort Worth, TX 76177
#FTW3/FTW4 – 15201 Heritage Pkwy, Fort Worth, TX 76177
#XUSB – 14900 Frye Rd, Fort Worth, TX 76155
#DDA2 – 3838 W Miller Rd, Garland, TX 75041
#HOU2 – 10550 Ella St, Houston, TX 77038
#DAL2 – 2601 S Airfield Dr, Irving, TX 75038
#HOU3 – 31819 Highway Blvd, Katy, TX 77493
#PTX1 – 2101 Danieldale Rd, Lancaster, TX 75134
#SAT2 – 1401 E McCarty Ln, San Marcos, TX 78666
#SAT1 – 6000 Enterprise Ave, Schertz, TX 78154
#DAL9 – 1400 Southport Pkwy, Wilmer, TX 75172
Utah
#SLC1 – 777 N 5600 W, Salt Lake City, UT 8411
#SLC2 – 6802 W Old Bingham Hwy, West Jordan, UT 84081
#SLC3/HSL1 – 355 N John Glenn Rd, Salt Lake City, UT 84116
#SLC4 – 770 South Gladiola, Suite 500, Salt Lake City, UT 84104
Virginia
#RIC5 – 11600 N Lakeridge Pkwy, Ashland, VA 23005
#RIC2 – 1901 Meadowville Technology Pkwy Chester, VA 23836
#BWI4 – 165 Business Blvd, Clear Brook, VA 22624
#RIC1 – 5000 Commerce Way, Petersburg, VA 23803
#KRB2 – 7000 Hardware Dr, Prince George, VA 23875
#RIC3/#HRC1 – 4949 Commerce Rd, Richmond, VA 23234
#HDC1 – 6885 Commercial Dr, Springfield, VA 22151
#BWI1 – 45121 Global Plaza, Sterling, VA 20166
#DDC4 – 44301 Mercure Cir, Sterling, VA 20166
Washington
#DSE4 – 6611 Associated Blvd, Everett, WA 98203
#BFI3 – 2700 Center Dr, Dupont, WA 98327
#BFI4 – 21005 64th St, Kent, WA 98032
#BFI5 – 20526 59th Pl S, Kent, WA 98032
#BFI6 – 20202 84th Ave S, Kent, WA 98032
#SEA6/#SEA8 – 1227 124th Ave, Northeast Bellevue, WA, 98005
#PWA1 – 2309 Milwaukee Way, Tacoma, WA 98421
#BFI8 – 20529 24th Ave S, SeaTac, WA 98198
#GEG1 – 10010 W Geiger Blvd, Spokane, WA 99224
#BFI1 – 1800 140th Ave E, Sumner, WA 98390
#DES7 – Sumner, WA 98390
#BFI7 – 1901 140th Ave E, Sumner, WA 98390
Wisconsin
#MKE1 – 3501 120th Ave. Kenosha, WI, 53144
#DML1 – 3935 W Mitchell St, Milwaukee, WI 53215
#MKE2 – 9700 South 13th St, Oak Creek, Wisconsin 53154 – Milwaukee County
Amazon Fulfillment Center Locations in Canada
#YVR2 – 450 Derwent Pl, Delta, British Columbia V3M 5Y9
#YVR4 – 4189 Salish Sea Way, Tsawwassen (Delta), British Columbia V4M 0B9
#YVR2 – 450 Derwent Pl, Delta, British Columbia V3M 5Y9
#YYZ1 – 6363 Millcreek Drive, Mississauga, Ontario L5N 1L8
#YYZ2 – 2750 Peddie Rd, Milton, Ontario L9T 6Y9
#YYZ3 – 7995 Winston Churchill Blvd, Brampton, Ontario L6Y 0B2
#YYZ4/#YYZ6 – 8050 Heritage Rd, Brampton, Ontario L6Y 0C9
#YYZ7 – 12724 Coleraine Dr, Caledon (Bolton), Ontario L7E 4L8
#PRTO – 6110 Cantay Rd, Mississauga, Ontario L5R 3W
#YOW1 – 5225 Boundary Road, Ottawa, Ontario, K4N 1P6
#YYZ9 – 900 Passmore Ave, Scarborough, ON M1X 0A1
#YUL2 – 3000 Rue Louis A Amos, Lachine, QC H8T 3P8
Amazon Fulfillment Center Locations in the UK
#LTN1 – Marston Gate Fulfillment Centre, MK43 0ZA Ridgmont, Bedfordshire, UK
#XUKK – Kuehne & Nagel, Merlin Park II, Wood Lane, B249QJ Birmingham, UK
#XUKA – Aston Lane North, Whitehouse Industrial Estate, WA7 3BN Runcorn, Cheshire, UK
#BHX2 – Robson Way, LE67 1GQ Ellistown, Coalville, UK
#XUKD – Unit A Daventry Distribution Centre, Royal Oak Way North, NN11 8LR Daventry, UK
#LBA1 – Unit 1, Balby Carr Bank, DN4 5JS Balby, Doncaster, UK
#LBA3 – Unit 3, Water Vole Way, DN4 5JP Balby, Doncaster, UK
#LBA2 – Unit 1, Iport Avenue, DN11 0BG New Rossington, Doncaster, UK
#EDI4 – Amazon Way, KY11 8XT Dunfermline, UK
#LTN4 – Unit DC1 (Prologis) Boscombe Road, LU5 4FE Dunstable, UK
#LTN2 – Boundary Way, HP2 7LF Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, UK
#GLA1 – 2 Cloch Road, Faulds Park, PA19 1BQ Gourock, Inverclyde, UK
#LCY1 – Unit B Prologis Park, Twelvetrees Crescent, E3 3JG London, UK
#MAN1 – 6 Sunbank Lane, Airport City, M90 5AA Altrincham, Manchester, UK
#BHX3 – Amazon UK Services Ltd, Royal Oak Way North, NN118QL Daventry, Northamptonshire, UK
#EUK5 – Goods In, Phase Two, Kingston Park, Flaxley Road, PE2 9EN Peterborough, UK
#BHX1 – Towers Business Park, Power Station Road, WS15 1NZ Rugeley, Staffordshire, UK
#CWL1 – Ffordd Amazon, SA1 8QX, Crymlyn Burrows, Swansea, UK
#LCY2 – Amazon Distribution Depot, Unit 2, London Distribution Park, Windrush Road, RM18 7AN Tilbury, UK
#MAN2 – Omega Plot 7c, Orion Boulevard, WA5 3XA Great Sankey, Warrington, UK
#XUKC – Yusen Logistics UK Vendorflex, Rutherford Drive, Park Farm South, NN8 6AQ Wellingborough, UK
#BHX4 – Plot 1, Lyons Park, Coundon Wedge Drive, CV5 9FA Coventry, UK
Amazon Fulfillment Center Locations in Europe
Czech Republic
#PRG1 – Amazon Logistic Prague s.r.o, U Trati 216, 25261 Dobrovíz, CZ
#PRG2 – K Amazonu 245, 25261 Dobrovíz, CZ
France
#XFRE – 91-135 Rue du Brisson, 38290 Satolas-et-Bonce, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
#LYS1 – Distripôle Chalon, ZAC du Parc d’Activité du Val de Bourgogne,2 Tue Amazon Sevrey, 71100 Saône-et-Loire, Burgundy
#XFRG – ZAC Moulin, 101 Le Chemin de Poupry, 45410 Artenay, Centre-Val de Loire
#MRS1 – Building 2, Rue Joseph Garde, ZAC, Les Portes de Provence, 26200 Montélimar, Drôme
#BVA1 – 7 Rue des Indes Noirs, 80440 Boves, Somme, Hauts-de-france
#XFRF – Avenue Louis Renault, ZAC du Val Bréon, Bâtiment 3, 77610 Châtres, Île-de-France
#XFRH – 900 Rue Denis Papin, 77550 Moissy-Cramayel, Île-de-France
#ORY1 – Pôle 45, 1401 Rue du Champ Rouge, 45770 Saran, Loiret
#LIL1 – Parc logistique de Lauwin-Planque 1, Rue Amazon Douai, 59553 Lauwin-Planque, Norde-Pas-de-Calais
Germany
#FRA1 – Amazon Logistik GmbH, Am Schloß Eichhof 1, 36251 Bad Hersfeld
#FRA3 – Amazon Logistik GmbH, Amazonstraße 1 / Obere Kühnbach, 36251 Bad Hersfeld
#BER6 – Amazon Logistik AF München GmbH, Am Borsigturm 100, 13507 Berlin
#BER3 – Amazon Brieselang GmbH, Havellandstr. 5, 14656 Brieselang
#DTM2 – Amazon Logistik Dortmund GmbH, Kaltband Straße 4, 44145 Dortmund
#XDEU – DHL Solutions GmbH, Barentsstrasse 24, 53881 Euskirchen
#MUC3 – Amazon Distribution GmbH, Amazonstrasse 1 Zeppelinstrasse 2, 86836 Graben
#CGN1 – Amazon Koblenz GmbH, Amazonstrasse 1 / Industriepark A61, 56330 Kobern-Gondorf
#LEJ1 – Amazon Distribution GmbH, Amazonstrasse1, 04347 Leipzig
#LEJ2 – Amazon Distribution GmbH, Imaging Operations, Friedrichshafner Straße 72a, 04357 Leipzig
#XDES – Hermes Fulfilment GmbH Standort Löhne, Schillenbrink 6, 32584 Löhne
#XDET – Geodis Malsfeld NS 3PL, Bornwise 1, 34323 Mansfeld
#XDEB – DHL Logistik-Center Ludwigsau, Im Fuldatal 2, 36251 Ludwigsau OT Mecklar
#XDEI – Geodis Logistics Deutschland GmbH Niederlassung Hamburg, Bei der Lehmkuhle 2, 21629 Neu Wulmstorf-Mienenbüttel
#STR1 – Amazon Pforzheim GmbH, Amazonstraße 1 (A8 Exit 44 Pforzheim Nord direction Bretten), 75177 Pforzheim
#XDEH – Kühne + Nagel (AG & Co.) KG Betriebsstätte Rennerod, Industriegebiet Alsberg, 56477 Rennerod
#DUS2 – Amazon Fulfillment GmbH, Amazonstraße 1 / Alte Landstrasse, 47495 Rheinberg
#XDEJ – Baur Versand GmbH & Co KG, Siegfried-Lapawa-Straße 1, 96242 Sonnefeld
#EDE4 – Amazon Logistik Werne GmbH, Wahrbrink 25, 59368 Werne
#EDE5 – Amazon Logistik Werne GmbH, Wahrbrink 23, 59368 Werne
#DTM1 – Amazon Logistik Werne GmbH, Carl-Zeiss-Straße 3, 59368 Werne
#HAM2 – Amazon Logistik Winsen GmbH, Borgwardstraße 10, 21423 Winsen an der Luhe
Italy
#XITD – Amazon XITD – Geodis Logistics, Viale Maestri del Lavoro 990, 45031 Arquà Polesine
#MXP5 – Amazon EU Sarl c/o Amazon Italia Logistica Srl, Strada Dogana Po 2U, 29015 Castel San Giovanni
#XITC – Amazon XITC – Geodis Logistics SpA, Via Aldo Moro, 4, 20080 Francolino di Carpiano
#FCO1 – Amazon Italia Logistica S.R.L., Via della Meccanica, 4, 02032 Passo Corese
#TRN1 – Amazon Italia Logistica S.R.L., Strada Provinciale per Rondissone 90, 10037 Torrazza Piemonte, Italy
MXP3 – Amazon Italia Logistica S.R.L., Via Rita Levi Montalcini, 2, 13100 Vercelli
Poland
#KTW3 – Amazon Fulfillment, ul. Bojkowska 80, 44-141 Gliwice
#SZZ1 – Amazon Fulfillment sp. z o.o., Kolbaskowo 156, 72-001 Kolbaskowo
#POZ1 – Amazon Fulfillment, Poznanska 1d, 62-080 Sady
#KTW1 – Amazon Fulfillment sp. z o.o., Inwestycyjna 19, 41-208 Sosnowiec
#WRO1 – Amazon Fulfillment, Czekoladowa 1, 55-040 Bielany Wrocławskie
#WRO2 – Amazon Fulfillment, Logistyczna 6, 55-040 Bielany Wrocławskie
#WRO3 – Amazon Fulfillment, Czekoladowa 1, 55-040 Bielany Wrocławskie
Spain
#BCN1 – Amazon Fulfillment, S.L., Avinguda De les Garrigues 6-8, 08820 El Prat de Llobregat, Barcelona
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2022.12.28 21:51 emseearr Bomb Cyclone Xmas Roadtrip Report
TLDR: EVs struggle when it’s really, really cold out, as do the Electrify America chargers. The high winds (35-50mph) and frigid temps (-10-0º) conspired to drive our efficiency below 1.88m/kw leaving us with an effective range of about 130 miles. The lack of a heated windshield, camera and sensor covers led to ice buildup that took the driver assists offline for portions of the trip. The lack of a rear wiper makes the rear window essentially useless in any weather, but you already knew that. Electrify America continues to disappoint, but you already knew that, too.
On we go…
After a drama-free 2000mi roundtrip to Western NY for Thanksgiving in our 2022 Ioniq 5 SE, I figured going 375mi down to Missouri and back to visit my partner’s family would be easy. That trip had temperatures in the 20–40º range and saw efficiency around 2.7–3.2m/kw, and we even got max speed (255kw) at one EA charger on the Ohio turnpike! Shoutout to Indian Meadow Service Plaza.
I knew we had some extremely cold weather coming, but no precip expected along the route, so I lowered my efficiency expectations and assumed we’d still achieve at least 2.2m/kw, giving us an effective range of 154mi between stops. We left Chicago with 100% and a pre-warmed cabin, planning to use ~90% to get to the first charger 146mi away in Bloomington, IL where we’d plug in at the EA at Walmart, walk over to Bob Evans for lunch, and leave with another 100% to drive 143mi to visit my partner’s Grandma in Edwardsville, IL for a bit, then another 10mi to the EA in Collinsville for our last charging stop, filling up to 80% to get us to our hotel in Farmington, MO. Getting to the hotel should only take about 40% charge, leaving some range to visit family before grabbing enough juice in town with our portable charger to make it back to Collinsville for the return route on Monday.
Best-laid plans, as they say.
Having reclaimed some electrons from the traffic leaving Chicago, we were cruising comfortably with the heat on at 10mph over the limit, and doing slightly better than our efficiency target, with the car reporting 2.4m/kw. It was lovely and cozy, we were just chit-chatting casually, and everything was perfect. We then we passed Joliet, and the opportunity to stop at the local EA station, when we hit wicked headwinds. The local weather showed 35-50mph gusts that were battering us and everyone else on the road.
Semis were wobbling, and many had pulled off to the shoulder to wait for the winds to die down. We could hear and feel the gusts shaking our heavy car, and even with the heat our cabin went frigid and ice started to form on the windshield about as fast as the defroster and wipers could clear it. Our efficiency number ticking down steadily as we soldiered on, hitting our 2.2 target and continuing to fall. We turned off the heat and slowed down, following a Buick going 68mph (in a 70!) as long as we could. As I did the math in my head and starting googling for closer charging options, it sure seemed like we were toast.
I remembered that the Wally’s in Pontiac had installed some fast-ish CCS chargers, but Plugshare reviews from the day before reported that they were all down for service, so that was not an option. Our efficiency stabilized as we passed Pontiac, and with 38mi left to go before EA Bloomington, it seemed like we might *just* make it with what we had left, but I started looking for other options along the route … and wasn’t finding anything that seemed like it would save us. About 25mi out from EA Bloomington, I figured we probably only had about 20mi of real range left, and a Schnuck’s in Normal with a slow L2 charger in its parking lot was 7mi closer and seemed like our best bet.
After the car flashed the usual procession of warnings at 10% and 5%, I saw a new one at 3% when the turtle of doom appeared and warned us to CHARGE IMMEDIATELY as we pulled in to Schnuck’s and plugged in. We has used 75kw, 97% of the battery, to go 141mi, an efficiency of 1.88m/kw. Slightly better than a Hummer EV. Embarrassing.
The L2 chargers at Schnuck’s looked absolutely ancient. Yellowed J-1772 handles attached to a terminal that looked about as advanced as a pocket calculator. The stall had no display, just a few buttons with glyphs made indecipherable by the weather. Nevertheless, I plugged in, noticed one of the buttons had what kind of looked like a power symbol on it and pressed it. The terminal lit up green like Christmas and the stall started pumping … well, drizzling 5.8kw into our very thirsty battery.
My mental math told me we’d need to stay about half an hour to get enough juice to make the 7mi to the EA around the corner with a reasonable margin of error, so we went inside and did a little shopping, looking for some road snacks and a meatless roast to bring to Christmas dinner, since my partner had forgotten to pack the one in our freezer at home. We scoured the frozen food section, but there were no vegetarian holiday roasts in sight. The shopping trip took all of 11mins, and we went back to the car to sit and google in the cold. Looking at the map, I saw that taking the surface streets instead of the highway would shave 1mi off the route and take significantly less juice, though it would also add an extra 10mins of travel time, but that was just fine as long as we got there.
We set off with 8mi of range for our 6.1mi journey, confident driving slowly in town would get us there, my only worry now was that the EA app was reporting 3 of the 4 stalls were occupied. Could we get there in time to snag the last open spot, or did taking the surface streets doom us to an interminable wait behind a long line of slow-charging Bolts and Leafs?
As we rolled up to the EA Bloomington station it was … empty. All 4 stalls were open, even though the app was still reporting it was 3/4 full. Based on a Plugshare review from another Ioniq 5 driver from a few days before, we backed in to Stall #2, queerly the one stall reported as available in the app, plugged in, and nothing happened.
No amount of plugging and unplugging, playing with the screen, or the app would get the stall to start charging, so we popped over to Stall #4, avoiding #1 because I like to keep the CHAdeMo free for my hapless Leaf friends, and also avoiding #3 due to bad Plugshare reviews. #4 connected and started charging immediately, giving me no chance to enter my membership, but it did cheerfully announc that this one was on the house! No doubt because of the sad, strange state of this station. The car was pulling down about 70kw, which was fine (I guess), so we walked the 0.5mi to Bob Evans to soak up some warmth and tuck in for a long lunch until we hit 100%.
Since I couldn’t start the charge in the EA app, I monitored the SoC via Bluelink (barf) while we ate. Being Xmas eve, the place was understaffed and moving slowly, but our order was eventually taken, and the food did eventually arrive, and we did eventually eat it. I noticed the car had hit 95% while I was taking the last few bites of the saddest BLT sandwich and cup of canned beef vegetable soup I have ever consumed, so I dabbed the corners of my mouth with my napkin, put on my coat and hat, and sprinted back to the car while my partner finished his meatless breakfast skillet and settled up.
Dashing through the snow, and across traffic since there are no sidewalks or crosswalks in sprawlville, I arrived with the charger showing 98% on the clock, and a friendly-looking Rivian truck driver standing outside his ride at Stall #3. We chatted a bit, he’s a local who charges at home and “at the plant” when he can, but gets some opportunistic charge at this station sometimes when he’s passing through or shopping at Walmart. Stall #3 was topping out at 40kw(!) for him, and a driver in a Rivian SUV struggled with Stall #2 as I had an hour ago.
“That one’s not working, I tried it an hour ago!” I yelled across the chasm, as the frustrated driver shook her fist and got back in her handsome tank to try her luck with charger #1.
As Stall #4 rounded up to 100%, I wished the friendly Rivian truck driver best of luck, unplugged and scooted back over to Bob Evans to collect my partner, and we made our way to Edwardsville to see his Grandmother.
Given the poor performance on our first leg of our journey, we opted to make another stop at EA Springfield, to top up just enough to give us a more comfortable cushion, should we encounter more frigid headwinds. My partner drove as fast as he wanted and blasted the heat, since we were less concerned about efficiency on this 69mi sprint to the next charger, netting us about 2.1m/kw efficiency. Not great, not terrible.
Charging at Springfield was slow (50-110kw) but unremarkable, save for the fact that this was the first EA I’d seen where the service hardware was sitting exposed on the median adjacent to the stalls instead of sitting protected in a metal enclosure. Further weirdness, the host Walmart had an ornate entrance, featuring a curved stone frieze inscribed with a quote from Abraham Lincoln proclaiming “People are just as happy as they make their minds up to be,” held aloft by concrete doric columns. Just state capitol stuff, I guess.
After hitting 80% we started the 73mi trek to see Grandmother’s assisted living facility in Edwardsville, then a further 10mi to the EA at a Walmart in Colllinsville. Sitting in the cold at Grandma’s for 90mins left the battery quite frigid and disinterested in accepting charging, so the rate of charged stayed around 60-70kw for 20mins while it thawed, and eventually perking up to 132kw. It took about 35mins to go from 35% to 85%, and we took off for the final 82mi leg of our journey; crossing the border into MO and stopping for dinner at a great Thai place north of Festus (also the only place open), before completing the last leg to our hotel in Farmington.
Subtracting the 90min stop at Grandma’s (an L2 charger would be a welcome addition to her assisted living facility’s parking lot), we spent 8.5 hours for a trip that used to take 6 in our 2003 Honda Civic. The extra time was all spent charging, with 30mins on an L2 in the Schnuck’s lot in Normal the worst of it.
Under ideal conditions, two charges to 90% in Bloomington and Collinsville should have done the trick, but the weather extremes sapped our range and the EA hardware’s resolve.
Before checking in at the hotel, I noticed a 120v outlet at the front entrance, about the length of my portable charging cable away from the parking spot we’d backed in to. I inquired if it would be alright if we made use of that outlet during our stay and the chipper clerk seemed a little confused, but said that would be no problem at all. The last time someone did that, she scoffed, the guest was charging their car! Imagine that.
We moved our luggage from the car to our room, and I returned to see if I could wrangle some free electrons from our two-star hotel, but the outlet was dead. No amount of wiggling or playing with the test and reset buttons on the GFCI yielded any signs of life. I informed the clerk, and she was equally surprised and flummoxed as she was when I first inquired about the plug, and promised she’d try to figure out why and get it fixed.
We had arrived at the hotel with 44% SoC left on the clock, which fell to 38% overnight. I assume this went toward topping off the 12v battery and keeping the traction battery at a stable temperature through the frigid Christmas Eve. Losing any charge was a little worrying because our options for charging in town were very limited, as in there were practically none. The only publicly available charger was a 7.2kw box at a Ford dealer 1mi up the street from the Hotel, which multiple Plugshare reviews stated was fair game and the dealership was happy to let anyone use it, even when the dealership was closed. Other than that, Plugshare showed nothing in 30 mile radius, where a Schnuck’s in Festus promised a pair of 62kw CCS ChargePoint stations.
Christmas Day we drove around a bit in my partner’s hometown, we were expected at a Christmas luncheon at his sister’s house a little later, and his Stepmom’s after that. My partner thought his sister might have an outside plug we could use while we were there enjoying the festivities. We were down to about 25% SoC by the time we arrived, and a 120v socket wasn’t going to do much for us. I didn’t see anything useful on the outside of her house, so I didn’t press the issue and instead starting making other plans while we—well I—ate ham, and we enjoyed the potatoes, green bean casserole, rolls, etc, and played a board game with our 7 year old nephew and talked about life and family stuff.
I kept thinking about that fast charger at the Schnuck’s in Festus, near where we had dinner on the way in. To me, it seemed to make more sense to go there and charge up to 80-90% in an hour rather than sitting at the Ford dealership for two hours. I was afraid of being an interloper, siphoning free electrons while hoping not to get chased off because we weren’t in a Mach-E, Lightning, or PHEV Escape (barf).
With nothing much to do for a couple of hours after lunch, and time to kill before we were due at his Stepmother’s, I proposed my idea. My partner was resistant, it didn’t seem to make sense to him to drive an hour roundtrip to charge for an hour, but when I explained the difference in scale between the charger at the Ford dealer (45% SoC for two hours) and the Schnuck’s (60-70% SoC in the same two hours, including the drive back) he eventually agreed and we set off for Festus.
We had pretty good efficiency on the way up at 2.6m/kw, and lo and behold, the unassuming chargers at that grocery store in rural MO turned out to be the MVP of our trip. It immediately started charging at 62kw, and after 10mins or so had climbed to 125kw, holding steady until we hit 80%. Reading the tin a little more closely, I saw that the stalls were rated at 125kw “shared”, but I’m not sure if that meant it would be doling out 62kw each if another car parked at the stall next to us, or if a Leaf could make use of the CHAdeMO plug on the other side of the stall we were on. But either way, I was happy to pay the $0.25/kw, and we ended up getting 83% charge because I couldn’t figure out how to shut the thing off. Plexiglass was affixed over the touchscreen, making the big STOP button untouchable. I had to go into the ChargePoint app and stop it from there.
After gushing about this charger (these should be everywhere!) and talking a little more shit about EA (fucking trash!), my partner was very pleased, and we headed to his stepmother’s place in Farmington. After a nice long visit, we stopped to see a few other people, ate a mediocre asian buffet dinner, and made it back to the hotel with 62% SoC. If we lost some charge overnight, we should still have plenty to make it back to the EA in Collinsville for our return trip.
As usual, I’m bumping up against the 15,000 character limit in this sub, so the story continues in the comments!
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2022.11.17 19:25 SchlesingerMindy323 [HIRING] 25 Jobs in IL Hiring Now!
Hey guys, here are some recent job openings in il. Feel free to comment here or send me a private message if you have any questions, I'm at the community's disposal! If you encounter any problems with any of these job openings please let me know that I will modify the table accordingly. Thanks!
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2022.10.08 16:37 BelloMufasa Isso PERTENCE a esse sub !
2022.08.11 17:37 themanbow Guide to the Metro East, part 6 (Monroe County)
This will be the last part of this series, as the rest of the Metro East is too rural for an already bridge-allergic St. Louis population to consider.
However, there is one very good reason to consider Monroe County if you are moving to the Metro East: if you work in South St. Louis County, as Columbia is so damn close!
There aren't really any "bad" areas in Monroe County (outside of maybe Dupo, which is a small town at the St. ClaiMonroe County border. I didn't cover Dupo in the St. Clair County section because it's so small--it is a nice little town. Just stay away from northern Dupo because it's so close to Cahokia, but even that's not East St. Louis levels of bad (maybe a tad better than Granite City levels?).
Monroe County: - Columbia:
- If you work in South St. Louis County (or perhaps even West St. Louis County barring traffic), this puts you VERY close to those places.
- Population: Around 10,000 so basically Troy/Bethalto/Highland/Wood River levels. A tad below Swansea/Shiloh. This is the largest town in Monroe County, which explains why it's often overlooked in favor of Madison (Edwardsville/Collinsville/Alton having 27,000 to 30,000 populations) and St. Clair Counties (Belleville doing the heavy lifting at 40,000+ and O'Fallon at 30,000).
- Schools: Not familiar with Columbia School District #4. I hear it's a good district, maybe slightly below the top 5 in the Metro East (in no particular order O'Fallon, Edwardsville, Mascoutah, Highland, Troy/Triad). Maybe someone from the area can confirm or refute this.
- Stuff to do: Nice park near Columbia High School (Bolm-Schuhkraft), shopping all up and down IL-3 from about a mile east of the I-255 junction to around where you get to Waterloo. If you want more to do, again, you're damn near a hop, skip, and jump away from South St. Louis County. Screw Fairview Heights--South County Mall is closer!!! Six Flags St. Louis is only about 25-30 minutes away from Columbia!!!(Compare that to 45 minutes from most of St. Clair County and an hour from any part of Madison County not named Collinsville or Maryville)
- Crime: Not a major issue since the closest "ghetto" would be Cahokia which is about 5 miles north, and South St. Louis County is one of the safer part of St. Louis County as a whole. I'd probably estimate...maybe Collinsville/Maryville-ish levels? Better than Collinsville, maybe about where Maryville is? Would Edwardsville/Glen Carbon levels be a stretch?
- Interstate access is super-easy: go north on IL-3 and it runs concurrent with IL-255. Go three miles south and you're in Missouri.
- Waterloo
- Go farther south on IL-3 and you'll be here.
- It's almost identical to Columbia in many ways.
- Population is the same Schools aren't ranked as high Crime levels are about as low.
- Being farther from Cahokia might put this number down even lower...I'm not sure.
- Stuff to do is roughly the same with nice parks, shopping down Route 3 (not as much, though).
- Proximity to South St. Louis County is farther--it's everything I m mentioned in the Columbia section plus the distance you have to drive through Columbia to get to I-255.
- Red Bud
- Now here's a small town with a very nice little downtown-like feel (around where IL-159 ends and meets IL-3 and IL-156).
- Population: About 3500, so it's small. Everything around it is rather rural.
- It had a local pharmacy that closed back in May (I know the former owner--much as he tried, it's hard to make small pharmacies in rural towns profitable these days).
- Schools: Red Bud District 132. I hear it's decent.
- Crime: Nope. It's a rural town, so that's pretty much expected (outside of maybe Jefferson County meth labs, which I haven't heard of anything like that coming out of little ol' Red Bud).
- Things to do: Aside from small town shopping, you'll have to drive about 20 minutes west on the 159/156/3 intersection down Route 3 to get to Waterloo and Columbia (or north about 20-30 minutes on IL-159 to get to Belleville via Hecker and Smithton; or 10-15 miles east down IL-156 to get to Sparta, but even that's a bit lacking). Going farther south on IL-3 will take you through even more rural stretches until you get to Chester in Randolph County.
- Interstate access? Forget it. Best option is to take IL-3 for a good 25-30 minutes through Waterloo and Columbia to get to IL-255. Sparta It's large enough to get a Walmart, so I might as well cover it. :D It's about 10-15 miles east of Red Bud down IL-156. Population: About 4000, so larger than Red Bud. :)
- Schools: Not familiar with their school district. From what I'm reading, it's ranked lower than Red Bud. Crime: About what you would expect of a town in the middle of nowhere--probably at the same level as Red Bud.
- Things to do: Aside from the Wally World? Can't think of much. Maybe someone from the area can fill in. Interstate access: worse than Red Bud. Although you CAN drive north for a while to get to Mascoutah, then past that and eventually get to I-64, but it's a LONG way (I found this out the hard way).
Honestly, I'm not sure what else is worth covering. Valmeyer's a nice little town (around 1200 population). South of Red Bud will pretty much get you into Randolph County. North of Red Bud will get you to Hecker (which I can't remember if it's in St. Clair County, Randolph County, or straddles their county line).
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2022.08.11 17:28 themanbow Guide to the Metro East, part 5 (northern Madison County, good areas)
Apparently I forgot to finish this series (I had this one buried deep in another post's comments but forgot to give it its proper post).
Feel free to add to this if I left some blanks or comment if I posted something that may no longer be accurate (some things are subjective, so let's not get into a war of opinions, though).
northern Madison County There aren't really any whole towns in northern Madison County that I would consider Bad or if there are, it's only in small pockets. So I'll just go through this part of the county in general:
- Alton
- Largest town in Madison County (Population broke 30,000 as of the 2020 census, beating out Edwardsville, Collinsville, and Granite City). Has a very "old town" feel.
- Schools: I hear they're ok. Definitely not Edwardsville quality, but certainly not Granite City either.
- Cost of living: Probably somewhere between Collinsville and O'Fallon's costs, depending on where you're at in Alton.
- Crime: There are small pockets of Alton that you want to stay away from. Outside of those pockets if on a scale of 1 to 10, 1 is Edwardsville and 10 is East St. Louis, you're looking at a 3 or 4. Best areas are a 2, worst areas are a 6. The bad pockets are around the south-southeast part of Alton--not quite by Illinois Highway 143 (IL-143), but closer to IL-140.
- Stuff to do: Quite a bit: downtown is very nice, Fast Eddie's Bon Air if you like bars (in the past, even going there for food was awesome, but the food got more expensive), you have the riverfront, a riverboat casino, and if that's not enough for you, you can drive across the Clark Bridge and about 10 minutes down US-67 to get to North St. Louis County for...some reason. Hell, if you like waterparks, you can drive west down the Great River Road for about 20-30 minutes into Grafton and go to Raging Rivers!
- Like Belleville, Alton is not serviced by any major interstate, but you can go down US-67 to get to Missouri easily or down IL-3 in the southeastern part of Alton (near East Alton--yes, this is a separate city) for about 5-10 minutes to get to I-270.
- Godfrey
- Northeast of Alton, it's a small college town (Lewis & Clark Community College--campus is a lot bigger than many community colleges)
- Schools: Not familiar with Godfrey schools or whether or not they share with Alton
- Cost of living: Probably on the higher end of Alton's scale.
- Crime: Lower than Alton, as Godfrey doesn't have those "hood-like" pockets that Alton has.
- Population: Around 17,000 (around Fairview Heights levels)
- Stuff to do: Everything north and east of Godfrey is pretty damn rural, so you pretty much have to go to downtown Alton if you want to do stuff. They do have a nice park (Glazebrook Park).
- Although Godfrey is not serviced technically by a major interstate, IL-255 pretty much functions like an interstate (it's sort of an extension of proper I-255 itself), and is easy to get to from the northern part of town near their Walmart.
- East Alton (yes, this is a separate town)
- This is pretty much sandwiched between Alton (to the west), Bethalto (to the east), and Wood River (to the southeast), so it's pretty much a mixture of all three of those towns.
- Schools: East Alton and Wood River share the same school district (District 13), and again, not a super high quality school district (certainly not among the Edwardsville/O'Fallon/Mascoutah holy trinity), but it's not bad either.
- Crime: Lower than Alton, about the same as Wood River, higher than Bethalto.
- Population: About 8000 (Mascoutah-level)
- Stuff to do: Go to Alton. :D
- East Alton is close enough to IL-3 that you could drive south down it for 5-10 minutes to get to I-270.
- Bethalto
- The name was going to be "Bethel" but since there was already a Bethel, IL (at the time), they came up with an amalgamation of that name and Alton without the 'n'. So BethelAlton or Bethalto. :)
- This is also one of three Metro East towns that hovered at 9900 population throughout the 2010s while showing no signs of breaking 10,000 (Troy and Highland are the other two--although Troy broke 10k as of the 2020 census, Highland remained steady, and Bethalto lost a bit of its population, so it's around 9800 or so).
- Cost of living: Probably about the same as Godfrey...maybe a tad bit lower depending on where you're at.
- Schools: I'm not familiar with the quality of Bethalto schools. I assume they're at least decent. From what I've read, its high school (Civic Memorial) services Bethalto and the small towns of Cottage Hills (west of Bethalto), Moro (northeast), Meadowbrook (east of Moro if I remember correctly), and Rosewood Heights (east of that, north of Edwardsville, and not quite near Royal Lakes).
- Crime: Lower than Alton, East Alton, and Wood River. I dare say Bethalto may have the lowest crime rate out of all the northern Madison County towns with a population around 10k-ish or higher.
- Stuff to do: They have a nice arboretum if you are into nature as well as a nice park around that area. Other than that, your best bet is to go west into Alton, southeast into Edwardsville, take IL-255 to I-270 into north St. Louis County, or IL-255 to I-255 to I-55/70 to St. Louis city proper.
- Wood River
- I like to describe Wood River as the love-child of Bethalto and Granite City (particularly the refineries).
- Cost of living: Somewhere between East Alton and Bethalto.
- Schools: Shares the same district as East Alton (District 13)
- Crime: It's close enough to Edwardsville, East Alton, and Bethalto to where you won't have the same levels of crime as Granite City, but it is definitely higher than Edwardsville and Bethalto...probably around the same as East Alton...perhaps slightly worse depending on where you're at.
- Population: A tad bit over 10,000 (I don't count Wood River among the Bethalto/Highland/Troy trinity because Wood River's population was actually higher than 10,000 and shrunk a bit whereas the "trinity" hovered around 9900 and had problems breaking the 10k barrier)
- Stuff to do: You might as well go to Alton or Edwardsville since you're in close enough proximity to both. Other than that, like East Alton, you're right near IL-3 (western Wood River) or IL-255 (eastern Wood River) so you can take either of those to I-270 to get to north St. Louis County or I-255 to I-55/70 if you want to go to St. Louis city proper.
There are other towns that are similar to Wood River and Bethalto like Hartford (south of Wood River), Roxana (south of Hartford), and South Roxana (south of Roxana). Also north of Alton/Godfrey is Jerseyville, but that's taking you too far away from I-270 and everything surrounding Jerseyville is rural. Grafton is about 20-30 minutes west of Alton, is a nice small town in the sub-1000 population range, and has Raging Rivers water park, which is worth going to at least once.
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2022.07.01 19:39 themanbow Guide to the Metro East, part 3 (southern Madison County, Good areas)
I figured it was best for these to have their own posts considering that many people are asking about the Metro East, and my responses are buried deep in the comments of another post.
I will, however, pause for now and continue over the weekend, as I don't want to spam the hell out of this subreddit.
Feel free to add to this if I left some blanks or comment if I posted something that may no longer be accurate (some things are subjective, so let's not get into a war of opinions, though).
southern Madison County: While St. Clair County is more populated overall, Madison County has had a lot of exurban sprawl over the past couple of decades. Towns that were once quite rural have grown into respectable size suburbs.
However, like St. Clair County, there have been a few places that have fallen in decline (not as many as St. Clair, but the ones that did are notable).
Politically, Madison County swings, but has leaned a bit more red the past few elections. Finding an area that correlates with your political views is not difficult, as the rule of urban = blue and rural = red still applies, but the most populated areas (Edwardsville, Alton, Collinsville) are suburban and will have varied results.
Good Areas: - Edwardsville
- Most expensive cost of living in the St. Louis Metro East area bar-none. It's a college town and many well-off people live here.
- Schools: Many consider Edwardsville District 7 to be the best in the Metro East while others consider two in St. Clair County (O'Fallon and Mascoutah) to be just as good. District 7 has one high school, two middle schools, and a few elementary schools.
- Population: About 27,000 and remaining steady, but that may not be true for long. Edwardsville has grown A LOT in the 2000s and early 2010s, but leveled off around the late 2010s and is showing some signs of growth again.
- Crime: Pick any town in the Good list from St. Clair County. Crime is much lower than whatever you just pointed to. That doesn't mean the number is 0, as there have been an incident or two near SIU Edwardsville and I-270 within the past six months that have caused a few people to panic.
- Stuff to do: Edwardsville has a pretty good downtown (whether it's better or worse than O'Fallon may be opinion; Belleville's is better). Lots of shopping on Troy Rd (where Illinois 159 breaks off), but is not the shopping mecca that Fairview Heights or even the I-64 O'Fallon/Shiloh junction is. If you want to go to St. Louis city proper it's a bit longer to get there from Edwardsville than any of the St. Clair County locations I mentioned before, but if you want to go to North St. Louis County for some reason, it's about 10-15 minutes west on I-270.
- Interstate 270 is just a couple miles south of Edwardsville and Interstate 55 is accessible from the more rural (but showing signs of exurban sprawl) northeast part.
- Glen Carbon
- It's the "Swansea" to Edwardsville's "Belleville", thus it's "Edwardsville lite". Just about everything that applies to Edwardsville from cost of living to school quality (I think Glen Carbon residents go to Edwardsville schools) to low/lack of crime applies to it. In fact, getting to I-270 from Edwardsville means you're driving through Glen Carbon anyway.
- Population: Around 12,000--in the Swansea/Shiloh range.
- Collinsville (90% of it is in Madison County--the southern 10% is in St. Clair County)
- Much lower cost of living than Edwardsville. This is often the choice to live in for those that work in Edwardsville, but can't afford to live there. Still higher than Belleville, and about the same as Swansea, Fairview Heights, and O'Fallon.
- Schools: Eh. They're ok. Probably about the same quality as Belleville or Fairview Heights. They have one high school, I think two middle schools and a few elementary.
- Population: About 27,000--same as Edwardsville. Not sure if it's growing, shrinking, or remaining steady.
- Crime: I'd say about the same as Belleville more or less (west is worse than Belleville easily, east is better than Belleville). The western part of Collinsville near Cahokia Mounds and the horse track near I-255 may be the worst part of the town since it's near Fairmont City (bad) and Caseyville (the "least bad" of the St. Clair County "bads"). The more east of Illinois Highway 157 you are, the better the neighborhoods/the less crime.
- Stuff to do: Collinsville has a very nice downtown and has event about as much as Belleville's downtown does. In fact, if I were to rank Metro East downtowns, I'd say Collinsville would be in the top 5, if not top 3. You're about 10 minutes north of Fairview Heights if you want to do any major shopping, or you can go on IL-157 or Beltline Rd for not-so major shopping.
- Interstate 55/70 (I-55/I-70 merged interstate, or I-55/70 for short) is accessible near the IL-157 shopping center, or if you live closer to IL-159, you can drive about 5 minutes north to get to it from there, then go west on the highway 12-15 miles to get to St. Louis proper.
- Maryville
- Another situation of smaller town being related to a larger town. Maryville is the "Glen Carbon" to Collinsville's "Edwardsville". It may be better to say that Maryville has more things in common with Swansea (being nicer than its adjacent town) than Glen Carbon (Maryville seems a tad bit more than just "Collinsville-lite").
- Schools: They have their own elementary school. I think they have their own middle school? Older kids go to Collinsville High School.
- Crime: Certainly less than Collinsville. I'd say this is where Maryville has a bit more in common with Glen Carbon/Edwardsville than Collinsville.
- Cost of living: About the same as Collinsville.
- Population: Roughly 8000, so it's definitely a smaller town.
- Things to do: Not a whole lot within Maryville itself. Best option is to go into Collinsville or Edwardsville for downtown stuff, Fairview Heights for shopping, or St. Louis for city stuff.
- The Interstate 55/70 junction on IL-159 separates Collinsville from Maryville, so you definitely have easy interstate access.
- Troy
- Now this town's a bit of an odd bird, especially with its growth. It's located east of Maryville.
- Schools: It shares a school district with itself and two rural towns: St. Jacob and Marine, and is appropriately named "Triad."
- Crime: Very low, at Edwardsville/Glen Carbon/Maryville levels. Perhaps even lower than that considering that everything else around Troy is rural.
- Cost of living: Probably a little more expensive than Maryville, but not as high as Edwardsville.
- Population: Just broke 10,000 as of the 2020 census. Still growing, though.
- Things to do: Not much. Best options are the same as Maryville.
- Also has easy access to I-55/70.
- Highland
- Another odd bird. Highland is about 7-10 miles east of Troy.
- Schools: No idea about quality
- Crime: Very low since it's surrounded by almost nothing but rural area (I applied at a job for the city of Highland once and the interviewer told me that they're known as "Highland the Island")
- Cost of living: I hear it's actually pretty expensive (not Edwardsville-expensive) for what you get there.
- Population: Just a bit shy of 10,000 as of the 2020 census, and remaining steady.
- Things to do: Not much. Best options are the same as Maryville and Troy, although Highland does have a small shopping center on IL-143.
- Has easy access to I-70 about 5 miles north of Highland's shopping area.
The rest of southern Madison County that would fall under "Good" consists of rural towns that are not worth mentioning here, given the length of this list.
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2022.06.18 12:38 Yup_butthole99 Anyone in the Edwardsville IL area. I just got this new driving job for save a lot.
My first paycheck was 1600 and my second was 1700 after taxes. It’s a local job. And I do believe they are still hiring. It’s Blackhawk transportation Incase anyone is interested. Easy job. 10hrs a day. I love it so far.
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2022.05.17 19:14 tinnedcarp Portable Weigh station Alert. NB exit #2(gateway commerce drive) , IL 155 Edwardsville IL. Scales are set up at the bottom of the exit ramp.
Edit:255. My bad
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2022.03.21 15:03 TradedMedia Financed multifamily $13,258,000 Address: 5100 Kay Drive, Edwardsville, Illinois 62025, United States Address: 5100 Kay Drive,... Asset Type: multifamily Closed: 5 days ago Scott Modelski brokered the deal. Note: Scott Modelski broker a $13,258,000 loan for multifamily property. The deal...
2022.02.06 20:02 throwawaylurker012 Amazon's Hunt for HQ2: The Greatest Trick Jeff Bezos Ever Pulled and How They Helped Main Street America to Shoot Itself in the Dick
| TL;DR: - Bezos' Amazon Air (air package delivery network) has links to a hedge fund, who made a big bet against malls hoping malls around the country would fail.
- For years, Amazon/Bezos have taken advantage of subsidies (free money)/tax to the order of $4 billion. One trick involves opportunity zones, where Amazon can buy warehouses and wealthy investors can invest in to not pay capital gains. while you do. One study says an incoming fulfilment center can give 0 net jobs to a community.
- The hunt for a second headquarters HQ2, caused 238 cities to give up their data to Amazon, which it can now use to aggressively buy real estate and capitalize on more free money & tax subsidies, using this data against those very same cities.
https://preview.redd.it/qfgea93uf9g81.png?width=1200&format=png&auto=webp&s=37fe6f155b6fc693f20786349f4b3d464ed4db63 Because Amazon posted huge earnings and now is jacking up the price of Prime on everyday people like you, thought y'all might enjoy this. This is from my series "The Big Mall Short". In previous posts on other subs, I talked about how rich and wealthy bet against American malls hoping they would fail between 2017-2020, including Carl Icahn, and hedge funds Apollo Global, Mudrick Capital, and MP Partners. I n this post, I wanna focus on a company and owner we are all very aware of, and how they might be gaming the whole system of commercial real estate to their benefit, all while fellow Americans looking out for their towns and cities ended up hurting themselves, all none the wiser. Sections - Amazon & Apollo, Sitting in a Tree
- Amazon Air
- The Network
- How They’re Fucking Us: Racks on Racks on Racks, No Tax No Tax No Tax
- HQ2: The Greatest Trick That Jeff Bezos Ever Pulled
- The Akira Blob
1. Amazon & Apollo, Sitting in a Tree https://preview.redd.it/wxs3igwuf9g81.png?width=260&format=png&auto=webp&s=fae885f68100b3067997c85fb1e5fe312eb81a24 Apollo Global is a hedge fund made of wealthy people and clients that had, at one point, been competing with Amazon in the web server space back in the day. They competed in food too (Whole Foods v. Sprouts/Albertson's) but more recently have been cozy. Last June, Apollo set up $750 million in money to lend for people who aggregate Amazon’s 3rd-party sellers. The web server that Apollo bought (Rackspace) also has rumors that Amazon might buy a minority stake in the company. Rackspace, for your reference, is a huge player in Amazon's Web Services, which makes Bezos & co. more money than pretty much anything else Amazon offers, including Prime which it just jacked up prices on. https://preview.redd.it/4enb1xivf9g81.png?width=547&format=png&auto=webp&s=7b035d84db3ba123de69993f34fc8f792619382d So surprisingly, there’s a shit ton of wine-ing, dining, and 69'ing between these two recently. But this pairing's true heart lies in the backscreen of Amazon's operations. For these two, it was logistics. And that logistics came in the form of an airline tied deeply to Amazon Prime. 2. Amazon Air https://preview.redd.it/npk3ew3wf9g81.png?width=1024&format=png&auto=webp&s=ae18e8f5e1c18e575edfa35a96a3e87bb5250ef0 Between 2019 to 2020, Amazon settled on a partnership deal with airline Sun Country, which is owned by Apollo Global. Sun Country, which went public last year so that it could trade on the stock market, had to originally delay its IPO due to Covid. Sun Country was a smaller low-cost & cargo regional airline. Most people have never heard of it, but a lot of you might know of at least one link to it. Remember that Braniff airplane at the end credits of old South Park episodes? Fun fact, it was former Braniff airlines staff actually came together to form Sun Country in the 80s. You kinda see the similarity in the planes Sun Country teamed up with Amazon to accelerate its air shipping distribution in Amazon Air, as it continued to deliver keep retail competitors on the ropes. Sun Country would use its 10 Boeing 737s to support Amazon’s package delivery, while Amazon Air continued to expand. It was in the midst of that expansion that the Treasury Dept. also gave $45 million to Amazon & Apollo’s Sun Country during the pandemic in an emergency aid loan that it eventually paid back a year later. (And this is all while Apollo Global also benefited from at LEAST 1 other bailout during Covid.) https://preview.redd.it/tiu7ohvxf9g81.png?width=1280&format=png&auto=webp&s=42cb4fbc534b731112e7ce677c1ecdf3391dba1b Remember, this was all as that hedge fund, Apollo Global, was betting that malls around America would fail, damning those same jobs**. If it’s bet turned out right, it was positioned to help Amazon speed up its retail overthrow through Amazon Air & Sun Country speeding up its deliveries**. This was while looking at more and more Prime orders, adjusting the logistics ever so much as you might need to send a package from a California warehouse to a Texas one to be able to get it to someone's front door. But I wanna focus here on commercial real estate, so let’s start with where commercial real estate and Amazon mainly collide: fulfillment centers. 3. The Network https://preview.redd.it/phrtm9gyf9g81.png?width=760&format=png&auto=webp&s=881e47023b19806277ab73a3b9253401b6818efb If Amazon Air has become the new airborne mech warrior exoskeleton of Amazon & Prime’s logistic network (courtesy of Apollo and Sun Country), then its fulfillment center network--with its distribution and trucking--has been its spine and nerves. Amazon has been BALLS DEEP in expansion across the US countryside, inching across like a retail-killing Akira blob while snapping up commercial real estate at every turn. For starters: about right now in the US, it’s standing at about 338 fulfillment centers for packing, 666 delivery station networks for distributing, 80 Prime Now hubs, 101 regional sortation centers, alongside its Amazon Air-affiliated 18 airport hubs & 34 inbound cross docks. Now most US apes are familiar with fulfillment centers either from seeing them from a distance at home or on a drive, or–unfortunately, more often–when things go wrong. Whether it’s Amazon shuttling down unions outside its gates or keeping its workers from escaping an oncoming tornado at its Edwardsville, IL site (STL6) in a horrendous tragedy and loss of life, knowledge of Amazon’s fulfillment stores have permeated the news cycle in ways that other retailers' distribution networks might not have. https://preview.redd.it/4cpixz1zf9g81.png?width=648&format=png&auto=webp&s=d451dfe7b29a02502313a63bef7041955db87cf2 The biggest takeaway of the fulfillment center network and its growing grid of commercial real estate is that it runs according to this plan: - Most are located near places where people have more money to order from Prime, but built often in poorer neighborhoods
- Warehouses are located within a 20 minute drive from a major highway. In some cases, it’s even less than a ONE minute drive from a highway.
- With the help of Apollo's Amazon Air, across the entire country the average Amazon truck can get to an airport that can service its deliveries in less than 35 minutes.
In my research on Apollo's bet against malls, I tried researching history of what Amazon bought out and found 110 properties. Amazon bought out empty land lots, or spaces up for sale such as medical buildings, ranchland, old storage space, or even nursing homes. But whether razing a private school (Opa Locka, FL) or a golf course combo country club (Livermore, NY), or mall (that their friends at Apollo bet against) I wondered what helped them get this real estate. 4. How They’re Fucking Us: Racks on Racks on Racks, No Tax No Tax No Tax Look, I–as well as most of you–could write a fucking 2000 page book if we wanted on just how bad Bezos and Amazon has been fucking the US and the world if we wanted to, whether unions or pay. And there are 6969696969 more reasons than this one (j fc I mean another story literally just dropped while I was writing this about child laboslavery in China for how Amazon makes its Echo devices). But I’m here to focus on commercial real estate, and show you just how Bezos liked to fuck us there with no mayo lube for years. https://preview.redd.it/odlfjtb0g9g81.png?width=1918&format=png&auto=webp&s=8daef5c5a58d3690fc7dea9f9a21c9d202ab9221 Here’s one of the biggest ways that Bezos and commercial real estate intersect: free money & no tax. And guess how and where that eventual missing tax comes from to balance the books from all that commercial real estate SWAG Amazon gets? People like you. As of 2021, US states and cities have given $4.2 BILLION USD–and counting!--in subsidies (think “free money”) to Amazon. For Bezos, this rapid fuckery of tax greediness began exactly 10 years ago: The company’s aggressive behavior seeking tax breaks and subsidy deals took off in 2012, when it hired a veteran incentives consultant and created an office within its public policy department to specialize in getting “corporate welfare.” Before 2012, Amazon had not received more than three awards per year; since 2012, it has averaged 19 per year. Saying Amazon “grew” over time puts it lightly, as they've expanded a metric fuck ton. Just how much expansion was it? I n just TWO YEARS, it went from about 470 warehouses in Dec. 2019 to over 1200 as of last month. (This effectively doubled how much square footage they cover in the country.) So it nearly TRIPLED the number of warehouses (fulfillment centers & distribution centers) during the pandemic all while taking advantage of billions of tax subsidies. Literally, Jeff should be THANKING YOU AMERICAN TAXPAYERS FOR HELPING PROP UP HIS COMPANY DURING A PANDEMIC: About 1/10th of those 1200 sites helped Amazon by can kicking Amazon’s property tax, sales tax, income tax, fast-tracked its approvals, and even gave ol’ Jeffrey discounts on the land & commercial real estate he bought up. And this was part of the game plan pretty much from Amazon’s day-one transition to 2-day delivery and faster. In 2012, for example, Amazon would purposely put fulfillment centers in places where it could safely avoid having to give up sales tax in those states. It fiercely resisted this until it could no longer under the huge burst of Prime orders, even running up a tab of $269 million in uncollected taxes in Texas (!) But once 2017 kicked in, Amazon had to start paying sales tax for orders from states with sales tax. So were they ok with paying? FUCK NO. They quickly sought every opportunity they could. **** Guess where some salvation came? In a 2017 federal tax credit bill that unleashed lavish gift baskets to Bezos & friends, all thanks to commercial real estate and CMBS shit. https://preview.redd.it/zlb6j4k1g9g81.png?width=2052&format=png&auto=webp&s=3581299eb241280c6097fd8e052a7c5003e341aa A mazon located at least 171 (!) of its newest or upcoming warehouses in Opportunity Zones (OZ) throughout the US. They're meant to spur “investment”, are INSTEAD often used to hide capital gains for the rich . When these zones first started, nearly $2.3 trillion by the wealthy was hidden away in them under the cover of “investing in real estate and business projects”. So wealthy can bet against malls and then stash their winnings in these same areas tax-free. And if they reinvest OZ gains back into these zones, guess what? - Your tax rate goes down even more!
- You can kick the can on when you pay it too! And the winner?
- Any NEW capital gains from those second round of reinvestments are COMPLETELY TAX-FREE!
https://preview.redd.it/ckn9o382g9g81.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=77676899ea7258dd6e14994b530ca080ed15031f So that means as long as your cash gains respawn in one of these zones like a Call of Duty Vantage map at least twice, pretty much no IRS visit at all! And imagine how much cheaper this is to do and take advantage of during a pandemic, when the price of all this real estate shit the bed? “Amazon has elevated industrial in the eyes of investors…Once the ‘ugly duckling’ of the CRE space, industrial is now the top asset class and draws global investors, not just market specific investors. ...Investors want assets with stable tenants that will grow and produce strong returns. Buildings with tenants such as Amazon…it that bill and are in hot demand.” How fucked is this? Remember that Illinois tornado? Well, the state of Illinois ALONE has given nearly fucking $742 MILLION in tax subsidies to Amazon, a company that literally did nothing as it had locked its citizens inside and left them to die. In fact, that state is sooo bad that Illinois’ tax subsidies to Amazon are nearly 1/5th to 1/6th of ALL US state and local gimmes to Amazon. And it’s not just Illinois of course. Here’s how bad Fresno, California did: “The three [Amazon] facilities shown here are located in an "industrial triangle," with easy access to California’s Central Valley region via three major highways. The warehouse is less than a mile from a highway entrance and 15 minutes from the nearest airport. Nevertheless, Fresno approved up to $30 million in tax rebates and discounts for Amazon. That's 30 years of sales tax revenue plus a 90% property tax abatement lost to one of California’s neediest cities…With its insatiable appetite for public subsidies, Amazon is disinvesting communities for short-term profits,...But because Opportunity Zone investors are mostly secret and undisclosed, we cannot estimate the direct or indirect subsidies to Amazon created via OZs.”** So to add to the fuckery, not only is Amazon grabbing a shit ton of free money in small town to big US federal subsidy tricks, which most of us DIDN’T EVEN KNOW EXISTED, but we don’t even know WHO IN THE WEALTHY FUCK is helping invest in these to get out of capital gains taxes? With all this Amazon owns more land than buildings than any company, second only to Walmart. 5. HQ2: The Greatest Trick That Jeff Bezos Ever Pulled In my research I found the same year that hedge funds started betting against malls (in a bundle of real estate mortgages called CMBX.6) it was the same year as the hunt for HQ2, Amazon's 2nd headquarters: https://preview.redd.it/t6npf353g9g81.png?width=1690&format=png&auto=webp&s=f5f24b2a70b9586fd88eb5d4bcf34d40abce317b In 2017, Amazon poured across all the headlines with a simple statement: “We’re building a new, 2nd headquarters! But sowwy, we don’t know where we wanna put it! Help us figure it out!” It dangled the carrot of nearly $5 billion in investment for the winner, up to 50K new jobs in some places. And 238 cities and regions, under the guise of perhaps–too much faith–fought in a race to the bottom to appease Amazon even further than the 2017 tax credit already was (remember, this tax credit shit was BARELY reported on). Newark, NJ, home to Amazon subsidiary Audible, offered $7 billion in incentives, while Columbus, Ohio said ol’ Jeffrey could gave 100% absolutely no property tax. Small towns and regions like Milam County (TX) joined hoping “More jobs! Save a dying tax base! Build out our tech hubs!” https://preview.redd.it/1bnraz44g9g81.png?width=1934&format=png&auto=webp&s=6bf13ef41c0cb047a333654623290540bbc17ad8 Some caught onto the obvious bad effects of this countrywide “wild goose chase”, like a race to the bottom for better and better tax incentives for Amazon. Places even "fought" against each other, like NH insulting Boston: “Choose Boston and next year when you leave your tiny $4,000-a-month apartment only to sit in 2 hours of traffic trying to make your way to an overburdened airport, you’ll be wishing you were in New Hampshire. Or ... choose New Hampshire and invest in your high-growth future.” But eventually, the game stopped as Amazon eventually whittled down a shortlist of candidates, then offered to split its 50K jobs between 2 sites: Long Island City in Queens, NYC and Arlington, VA, home of its actual new HQ2 site (and conveniently, near Bezos’ new mansion in DC). For its Arlington location, it bought it from another hedge fund Blackstone, and this was signed off by Amazon's secretive shell company Acorn Development LLC. ****** You had some handwashing after the fact of course once all over, some like Philadelphia saying they lost because an Amazon was a NY Giants fan, or shit like this: Also, by all accounts, the HQ2 bid exercise within city government had some helpful internal benefits for bringing together a good team across departments and breaking down silos, which some city employees say has had some lasting positive effects. And the exercise also resulted in a lot of helpful research and marketing materials for the city that can be reused for non-Amazon economic development work. Yay? But here is the part that I wanted to focus on. It’s the part that made me go “oh shit” for a moment while researching all this. And it comes down to one word: data. Where the fuck did the HQ2 data go? https://preview.redd.it/06ofya05g9g81.png?width=1872&format=png&auto=webp&s=7c4130bda7d0c4746cbaf4d6fba92f8162c901ea And yes, of course, I wasn’t obviously the only one to think of this actual underhanded scenario: Amazon gained a huge perk from its HQ2 contest that's worth far more than any tax break…It has also given Amazon something that's potentially far more valuable than any subsidies it may have gleaned: a trove of data. "Amazon has a godlike view of what's happening in digital commerce, and now cities have helped give it an inside look at what's happening in terms of land use and development across the US," said Stacy Mitchell, a director of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, a think tank based in Washington, DC. "Amazon will put that data to prodigious use in the coming years to expand its empire." Amazon could use this data to aid in future expansion as it selects sites for new stores, warehouses, data centers, fulfillment centers, and other brick-and-mortar needs.In some cases, the bids could help Amazon get a leg up over its competitors, because the data they contain might not be publicly available. "This is an incredibly valuable trove of data that 238 cities spent time compiling and submitting to Amazon," Mitchell said. "At the end of the day, it may well be that the data is the most valuable thing that Amazon has gotten out of this. With all that was given, it was something that was echoed by many. It was never about the wild goose chase, but the leverage it could eventually take advantage of in the form of all of this data: "I think they had this in mind from day one," Richard Florida, a University of Toronto urban studies professor who tracked the HQ2 process... "This was about crowdsourcing data ... This was never about an individual HQ2." Florida called the bidding process a "game" that gave Amazon leverage on cities it could use for future business opportunities, even if those cities had little chance of winning the second headquarters…Indeed, some smaller cities that didn't meet the company's criteria for HQ2, such as a having population of at least 1 million people, submitted bids ...And some cities that made the list of 20 finalists...did not meet requirements like mass transit, but Amazon still engaged them through the final parts of the process and collected more information. SO it collected data even when it shouldn't something that companies would normally pay firms millions to do all this research, instead for free. And remember, there had been some murmurings that Jeff Bezos (C-E-O en-tre-pre-neur, born in 1964) ALREADY KNEW where he wanted to go pick their new HQ2 spot since it was near his new mansion and his newspaper. If, for example, Bezos ever wanted to pair his exhaustive customer data from Prime or Echo Dot services, he could easily pair that with the shit ton of demographic research that these places gave out, perfectly ready for Bezos to cross-reference and use. Sounds like some other billionaire we know? Here’s just a sample of some of the questions asked (and answered) by NYC: REQUEST FOR INFORMATION Project Clancy TALENT A. Big Questions and Big Ideas1**. Population Changes and Key Drivers.**a. Population level - Specify the changes in total population in your community and state over the last five years and the major reasons for these changes. Please also identify the majority source of inbound migration. d. Specialized tech talent availability and growth - Please provide specialized tech talent availability... Please also describe the companies in your community currently employing that talent. (i) Please also describe the companies in your community currently employing that talent and where their future growth will be. 3**. Venture Capital.** a. Current efforts - What is your community currently doing to support venture capital investment? Please include the presences of venture capital firms in your community... "if your software developer location quotient is low enough to suggest that a tech employer might struggle to recruit, but it is rapidly increasing and employers are having great success recruiting to your community right now, tell us that. (fucking really Jeffrey? "Tell us that?") Provide data on the median earnings, unemployment, home ownership, educational attainment, and undergrad enrollment gaps for underrepresented minorities in your community. https://preview.redd.it/pew5few7g9g81.png?width=1552&format=png&auto=webp&s=841de87f82373652278dbbc71563805f27d2d0bb Sure, lots of other questions exist about what they hope to do to help support STEM programs at high schools, or racial initiatives. But in New York City’s case, it gave Bezos 253 pages (!) worth of free fucking data and field research without them lifting a finger. Hell, he had asked some of these cities to tell THEM what the cost of a coffee at Starbucks cost in their area, or how much an avocado or some shit cost at Whole Foods (something fucking Bezos should know if he fucking owns that company), but these cities DID ALL THE RESEARCH FOR HIM. Other proposals are more secret. In the wake of HQ2 being given to DC, the city's report heavily redacted many parts of what it told Amazon. https://preview.redd.it/wbl4eyk8g9g81.png?width=1472&format=png&auto=webp&s=68039e38ffb893187001d306bf8273db5fb9badb And remember, in this post, we’re talking commercial real estate and tax shit. Did we see things like that here? YOU FUCKING BET. REAL ESTATE - LocationEasements, Licenses, Rights of Way
9. Acquisition Cost (if any)Please describe if all or a portion of Site will be made available at no or a reduced cost to the Project. c. Estimated cost of dark fiber lease/ownership F. Transportation 1. Air a. Nearest Airport: name, distance to Site, number of passenger carrier service providers. Also include any planned, funded and approved capital improvements to the airport. Chula Vista, CA proposal Planning, zoning, blah blah blah all tied up in a bow for Bezos and Amazon. For a company trying to expand its logistics monster, strategically picking sites that help give it the biggest tax breaks, sit between wealthier Prime users, it maliciously warp-speeded its expansion protocol under the guise of "yay you get jobs!" Remember this was the SAME year that Amazon was already making off like a bandit from using falling real estate prices, malls that were being bet against, and that Opportunity Zone shit. Bezos still wanted more and fucking got it. 7. The Akira Blob Amazon keeps expanding. T he Amazon commercial real estate Akira blob looms over the US: of the 10 largest industrial projects this year, EIGHT are Amazon. The total space of just those 8 projects could cover a space the size of Central Park end to end. By the end of 2021, 7% of all commercial real estate sales were from Amazon: And so where does that put us? There is a possibility that certain things might exist that we might not see (and I can’t find in my research yet). This could be shit like: - We might eventually see how HQ2 data might be used if we track cities like Worcester, MA who both offered up a proposal to host HQ2, then was denied only for a few years later to have its Greendale Mall torn down in preparation for a new Amazon site. This was all while it dangled a heavy carrot for Amazon, including $500 million in local real estate tax saving.
https://preview.redd.it/b23q8boag9g81.png?width=1404&format=png&auto=webp&s=2b74c83a5fbf9e5667f2721cca28c5ebd7a396d8 - As we see how Amazon is weaponizing opportunity zones, like Census Tract 1523.03 in Euclid, Ohio, which we’ll see is one of the first dead malls that Amazon has started to convert to fulfillment centers.
- We might continue to see how it works through some investment deals, with other wealthy hedge funds and the rich.
This all happens in the background of false promises from the giant. GoodJobsFirst’s stellar tracker shows how bad these "job" promises are: “This…tallies state and local economic development subsidy deals given to Amazon.com, Inc. for its warehouses, data centers, and film productions, and to its subsidiaries…Since we began collecting and exposing subsidies the company has received, we have encountered greater secrecy surrounding the packages awarded to Amazon. This sometimes makes calculating such costs difficult. Secret project names, non-disclosure agreements, and a reluctance by public officials to fully disclose costs -- even after a deal has been awarded -- suggests Amazon and public officials know these deals have become controversial.” So remember this is all happening to these cities, these towns, is unbelievable. Under the false promises of expansion, Ohio is one state that unfortunately got to fucking over its own statespeople the most. For Amazon’s workers in Ohio, even though its only the 53rd biggest employer in Ohio, nearly 1 in 10 of them are on food stamps. A three data center deal for Amazon in Ohio gave it no taxes for 15 years ($77 million). This is all as one EPI report said that an Amazon fulfillment center does nothing really for local employment, is wholly inefficient for job growth…all it does is replace 1 person working at a local spot for a job at an Amazon warehouse, giving near net-zero gain: https://preview.redd.it/82e4dtpbg9g81.png?width=1252&format=png&auto=webp&s=4451dc928e5b0396aaedfb7b64d0351fe1a32ffc So adding it a bit altogether, we know that hedge funds like Apollo can not only bet against everyday American’s malls, all while helping Amazon make its money hand over fisting all of us from billions in free tax giveaways, all while using tricks to give itself even more free tax giveaways, and under secret goose chase proposals? Chew on that next time you hear of Amazon Prime upping its prices on you. submitted by throwawaylurker012 to antiwork [link] [comments] |
2022.01.31 03:56 throwawaylurker012 The Big Mall Short #6: Amazon and How Jeff Bezos Helped Main Street America to Shoot Itself in the Dick
| TL;DR: - Bezos' Amazon has links to Apollo Global ("mall shorter") with their air logistics network (Amazon Air).
- For years, Amazon/Bezos have taken advantage of subsidies/tax to the order $4 Billion. One trick involves opportunity zones, which Amazon can buy warehouses and wealthy investors (hedgies?) can invest in to not pay capital gains. An incoming fulfilment center can give 0 net jobs to a community.
- The hunt for a second headquarters HQ2, caused 238 cities to give up their data to Amazon, which it can now use to aggressively buy real estate and capitalize on more free money & tax subsidies, using this data against those very same cities.
https://preview.redd.it/76t6k02ytxe81.png?width=1200&format=png&auto=webp&s=c5e5cbdd5232d8182b7c9ac1edfcaba7f2acf9d9 This is the Big Mall Short. In previous posts, I talked about how diving into Tuesday Morning being shorted to shit (92 days to cover) on its old ticker made me find its connections to CMBS loans. In Pt. 4, we figured out who was shorting American malls using a short bet against CMBX.6. This included Carl Icahn, Apollo Global (who tried buying GME in 2019), Mudrick (with ties to sticky floor), and MP Partners. I n Pt. 5 we made the discovery of balls deep GME exposure in CMBX.6: arguably over 77% of #6 malls had GME stores in them, adding more credence to that GME’s naked shorting could have tied into the “big mall short”. If you recall from Pt. 2, CMBS--or commercial mortgage backed securities--are a grab bag of loans to different offices, retail stores, and commercial real estate that you can buy or sell, or bet whether the price of all those leases will be paid off as those spaces do business. They’re often tied in with signed leases to these spots. If many of those offices, retail stores, and commercial real estate spots fail, welp then they can’t pay their lease and the entire grab bag (CMBS) might go down. These leases can be made to offices or factories, but they can also be made to retail stores like Tuesday Morning or GameStop. We also learned before that these loans can be bundled into bigger bundles (think the Jenga towers from "The Big Short") and can be bought, sold, cut up, or even be bet for or bet against (short). We've been looking at CMBX, which bundles many CMBS loans together. (For example, CMBX.6 contains GameStop, and was shorted against by some.) I n this post, we circle back to a company and owner we are all very aware of, and how they might be gaming the whole system of commercial real estate to their benefit, all while fellow Americans looking out for their towns and cities ended up hurting themselves, all none the wiser. We can't tell the story of Amazon and malls, without telling the story of Amazon and commercial real estate first. Sections - Bezos Buddies
- Amazon & Apollo, Sitting in a Tree
- Amazon Air
- The Network
- How They’re Fucking Us: Racks on Racks on Racks, No Tax No Tax No Tax
- HQ2: The Greatest Trick That Jeff Bezos Ever Pulled
- The Akira Blob
1. Bezos Buddies In Pt. 4, we saw how Carl Icahn and hedge funds looked to bet against CMBX.6, or "shorting" the malls inside (“the big mall short”). From that cast of characters, I did try to dig to see if there were any commercial real estate (or even retail CMBS links) that connected the “mall shorters” to Amazon outside of what we know many rich & hedge funds do: invest in Amazon's stock to make their balance sheet look good, or just to keep Marge from calling. Now sorry to disappoint in many ways. They all pretty much didn’t have any links. The second closest I could find was Mudrick Capital (who tried to "death spiral finance" sticky floor while it had its "mall short" position open) and its acquisition of Topps through its “MUDS” SPAC (special purpose acquisition company). Topps is a #10 retail item on Amazon’s website…and that’s it. That's the only link I found. Sad face. https://preview.redd.it/a7p3jp5ztxe81.png?width=2036&format=png&auto=webp&s=210184d47ec6f0d185a6ec005c940278a582c7ac But remember, I said “second closest”. So let’s step back from Mudrick and turn our eyes to someone else: Leon Black’s Apollo Global. If you’re wondering whether Amazon has any links to this SHF betting on “the big mall short”, then you bet your sweet candy buttcheeks they are. 2. Amazon & Apollo, Sitting in a Tree https://preview.redd.it/7mn1vc80uxe81.png?width=260&format=png&auto=webp&s=ecea1fa44b9e92d4264d1173608c0408c23e2f7a Apollo Global–who tried buying GME in 2019 with Sycamore, tried to “help” finance sticky floor with Mudrick Capital and D1 Partners, and was shorting malls in CMBX.6–had, at one point, been competing with Amazon in the web server space back in the day. Apollo Global bought Rackspace out from under Amazon’s nose back in 2016 as AWS was trying to expand. While Amazon bought out Whole Foods, Apollo tried to turn around FreshDirect & Sprouts. Apollo also pulled Amazon’s Carletta Ooton for their ESG. But Apollo Global and Amazon don’t always compete, especially recently. After Apollo recently threw nearly 2 billion at another grocer, Albertson’s, in the US, in July 2021 Apollo was eyeing UK foodshop Morrison’s, who partnered with Amazon. In June 2021 (a month after that bid for Morrison’s, Apollo also set up $750 million in credit facilities (money to lend) in part for aggregators of Amazon’s 3rd-party sellers. And remember Rackspace? Turns out in 2020, rumors began that Amazon might buy a minority stake in the company. Those rumors grew as of a few months ago into rumors that Amazon might engage in a wholesale buyout of Rackspace from Apollo Global. Rackspace, for your reference, is a huge player in Amazon's Web Services, which makes Bezos & co. more money than pretty much anything else Amazon offers, including Prime. https://preview.redd.it/yz4reb81uxe81.png?width=547&format=png&auto=webp&s=f60aedc63a051dba85c28c46beb17e0b194abc4e So surprisingly, there’s a shit ton of wine-ing, dining, and 69'ing between these two recently. But this pairing's true heart lies in the backscreen of Amazon's operations. For these two, it was logistics. And that logistics came in the form of an airline. 3. Amazon Air \"Wee here I come Jeffy babe!\"--Leon Black, Apollo Global Between 2019 to 2020, Amazon settled on a partnership deal with airline Sun Country, which is owned by Apollo Global. Sun Country, which went public last year so that it could trade on the stock market, had to originally delay its IPO due to Covid. Sun Country was a smaller low-cost & cargo regional airline. Most people have never heard of it, but a lot of you might know of at least one link to it. Remember that Braniff airplane at the end credits of old South Park episodes? Fun fact, it was former Braniff airlines staff actually came together to form Sun Country in the 80s. You can kinda see the similarity with Sun Country's old plane above Sun Country teamed up with Amazon to accelerate its air shipping distribution in Amazon Air, as it continued to deliver keep retail competitors on the ropes. Sun Country would use its 10 Boeing 737s to support Amazon’s package delivery, while Amazon Air continued to expand. It was in the midst of that expansion that the Treasury Dept. also gave $45 million to Amazon & Apollo’s Sun Country during the pandemic in an emergency aid loan. (And this is all while Apollo Global also benefited from at LEAST 1 other bailout during Covid.) Sun Country’s loan was part of the emergency airline aid package approved in March 2020. It had applied for the money so it wouldn’t have to ask Apollo Global and Amazon for money (ugh), but being fair, it eventually paid back this loan about a year later. https://preview.redd.it/byn4vq36uxe81.png?width=1280&format=png&auto=webp&s=2384892b7b02391ceed9dec34331f61c2c0a6e16 Well fuck’s sake, so we at least know there is some perhaps benefit to someone like Apollo Global in “the big mall short”. If it’s bet turned out right, it was positioned to help Amazon speed up its retail overthrow through Amazon Air & Sun Country speeding up its deliveries. This was while looking at more and more Prime orders, adjusting the logistics ever so much as you might need to send a package from a California warehouse to a Texas one to be able to get it to someone's front door. But of course, we’re here to talk commercial real estate, so let’s start with where commercial real estate and Amazon mainly collide: fulfillment centers. 4. The Network https://preview.redd.it/crwvbaq6uxe81.png?width=760&format=png&auto=webp&s=d5d09f6938818f6f03d5a1b9919d03345604fca9 If Amazon Air has become the new airborne mech warrior exoskeleton of Amazon & Prime’s logistic network (courtesy of Apollo and Sun Country), then its fulfillment center network--including its trucking and distribution arms--has been its spine and nerves. Amazon has been BALLS DEEP in expansion across the US countryside, inching across like a retail-killing Akira blob while snapping up commercial real estate at every turn. For starters: about right now in the US, it’s standing at about 338 fulfillment centers for packing, 666 delivery station networks for distributing, 80 Prime Now hubs, 101 regional sortation centers, alongside its Amazon Air-affiliated 18 airport hubs & 34 inbound cross docks. Now most US apes are familiar with fulfillment centers either from seeing them from a distance at home or on a drive, or–unfortunately, more often–when things go wrong. Whether it’s Amazon shuttling down unions outside its gates or keeping its workers from escaping an oncoming tornado at its Edwardsville, IL site (STL6) in a horrendous tragedy and loss of life, knowledge of Amazon’s fulfillment stores have permeated the news cycle in ways that other retailers' distribution networks might not have. The biggest takeaway of the fulfillment center network and its growing grid of commercial real estate is that there’s a method to Bezos’ fulfillment center madness, no matter how nondescript they seem: most are purposely located near places where people have more extra/discretionary income to order from Prime, with many warehouses clustered near highway arteries between big cities. These warehouses are purposely clustered near places with more Prime subscribers, and ALL warehouses are located within a 20 minute drive from a major highway. In some cases, it’s even less than a ONE minute drive from a highway. And with our talk of the Apollo-aided Amazon Air, across the entire country the average Amazon truck can get to an airport that can service its deliveries in less than 35 minutes. Now I tried looking at what I THOUGHT was the full list of fulfillment centers to figure what details I could track from its commercial real estate history. But from my small sample of 110, I found that most fulfillment centers were built in all different spaces, be it completely empty land lots, or spaces up for sale such as medical buildings, ranchland, old storage space, or even nursing homes. So whether razing a private school (Opa Locka, FL) or a golf course combo country club (Livermore, NY), they weren’t propping up JUST in a specific type of place (even if I wanted it to be JUST malls to feed my confirmation bias).But in my research it's easy to see that these fulfillment centers, spilling off the spokes of Amazon Air's flight patterns, all connected into a grander view of Amazon's angle of attack into commercial real estate. And the story of how many of these acquisitions for Amazon's fulfillment centers come to be led me to the great Vinnie from “The Big Short”s grand philosophical question...  5. How They’re Fucking Us: Racks on Racks on Racks, No Tax No Tax No Tax Look, I–as well as most of you apes–could write a fucking 2000 page book if we wanted on just how bad Bezos and Amazon has been fucking the US and the world if we wanted to. And there are 6969696969 more reasons than this one (j fc I mean another story literally just dropped while I was writing this about child laboslavery in China for how Amazon makes its Echo devices). But I’m here to focus on commercial real estate, and show you just how Bezos liked to fuck us there with no mayo lube for years. Here’s one of the biggest ways that Bezos and commercial real estate intersect: free money & no tax. And guess how and where that eventual missing tax comes from to balance the books from all that commercial real estate SWAG Amazon gets? People like you. As of 2021, US states and cities have given $4.2 BILLION USD–and counting!--in subsidies (think “free money”) to Amazon. For Bezos, this rapid fuckery of tax greediness began exactly 10 years ago, ironically the same year that the CMBX.6 “mall bundle” was first made: The company’s aggressive behavior seeking tax breaks and subsidy deals took off in 2012, when it hired a veteran incentives consultant and created an office within its public policy department to specialize in getting “corporate welfare.” Before 2012, Amazon had not received more than three awards per year; since 2012, it has averaged 19 per year. Saying Amazon “grew” over time puts it lightly, especially without mentioning this little wrinkle. All this no tax to Amazon comes from during its massive metric fuck ton of expansion, specifically in commercial real estate. Just how much expansion was it? I n just TWO YEARS, it went from about 470 warehouses in Dec. 2019 to over 1200 as of last month. (This effectively doubled how much square footage they cover in the country.) So it nearly TRIPLED the number of warehouses (fulfillment centers & distribution centers) during the pandemic all while taking advantage of billions of tax subsidies. Literally, Jeff should be THANKING YOU AMERICAN TAXPAYER APES FOR HELPING PROP UP HIS COMPANY DURING A PANDEMIC: About 1/10th of those 1200 sites helped Amazon by can kicking Amazon’s property tax, sales tax, income tax, fast-tracked its approvals, and even gave ol’ Jeffrey discounts on the land & commercial real estate he bought up. And this was part of the game plan pretty much from Amazon’s day-one transition to 2-day delivery and faster. In 2012, for example, Amazon would purposely put fulfillment centers in places where it could safely avoid having to give up sales tax in those states. It fiercely resisted this until it could no longer under the huge burst of Prime orders, even running up a tab of $269 million in uncollected taxes in Texas (!) But once 2017 kicked in, Amazon had to start paying sales tax for orders from states with sales tax. So were they ok with paying? FUCK NO. They quickly sought every opportunity they could. Guess where some salvation came? In a 2017 federal tax credit bill that unleashed lavish gift baskets to Bezos & friends, all thanks to commercial real estate and CMBS shit. https://preview.redd.it/w0b5euu8uxe81.png?width=2052&format=png&auto=webp&s=8226afbdb534ce46379c2bd0967712ae982a94a2 A mazon located at least 171 (!) of its newest or upcoming warehouses in Opportunity Zones (OZ) throughout the US. These opportunity zones in over 30 states, which are usually meant to spur “investment”, are INSTEAD often used to hide capital gains for companies and investors like those of Amazon . When these zones first started, nearly $2.3 trillion by the wealthy was hidden away in them under the guise of “investing in real estate and business projects”. So rich fucks–like Apollo Global, Mudrick, Stevie Cohen, Yass, or Ken Cordelle Griffin–can theoretically make capital gains (sometimes from crime shit as we’ve seen). Now if the same rich fucksticks reinvest those gains back into these zones, guess what? Your tax rate goes down even more! You can kick the can on when you pay it too! And the winner? Any NEW capital gains from those second round of reinvestments are COMPLETELY TAX-FREE! So that means as long as your cash gains respawn in one of these zones like a Call of Duty Vantage map at least twice, pretty much no IRS visit at all! And imagine how much cheaper this is to do and take advantage of a law during a pandemic, when fucking the price of EVERY commercial real estate asset–malls, land, offices–has fallen a shit ton? “Amazon has elevated industrial in the eyes of investors…Once the ‘ugly duckling’ of the CRE space, industrial is now the top asset class and draws global investors, not just market specific investors. ...Investors want assets with stable tenants that will grow and produce strong returns. Buildings with tenants such as Amazon…it that bill and are in hot demand.” How fucked is this? Remember that Illinois tornado? W**ell, the state of Illinois ALONE has given nearly fucking $742 MILLION in tax subsidies to Amazon, a company that literally did nothing as it had locked its citizens inside and left them to die. In fact, that state is sooo bad that Illinois’ tax subsidies to Amazon are nearly 1/5th to 1/6th of ALL US state and local gimmes to Amazon.**And it’s not just Illinois of course. Here’s how bad Fresno, California did: “The three [Amazon] facilities shown here are located in an "industrial triangle," with easy access to California’s Central Valley region via three major highways. The warehouse is less than a mile from a highway entrance and 15 minutes from the nearest airport. Nevertheless, Fresno approved up to $30 million in tax rebates and discounts for Amazon. That's 30 years of sales tax revenue plus a 90% property tax abatement lost to one of California’s neediest cities…With its insatiable appetite for public subsidies, Amazon is disinvesting communities for short-term profits,...But because Opportunity Zone investors are mostly secret and undisclosed, we cannot estimate the direct or indirect subsidies to Amazon created via OZs.”** So to add to the fuckery, not only is Amazon grabbing a shit ton of free money in small town to big US federal subsidy tricks, which most of us DIDN’T EVEN KNOW EXISTED, but we don’t even know WHO IN THE WEALTHY FUCK is helping invest in these to get out of capital gains taxes or even get collateral on their books in the form of commercial real estate? Amazon now holds more than $58 million worth of land and buildings, more than any other public company except Walmart. 6. HQ2: The Greatest Trick That Jeff Bezos Ever Pulled In Pt. 3, we talked about how important the year 2017 was to the “big mall short”. It was the year everyone piled in, including Alder Hill, Mudrick, Carl Icahn, MP Partners, and Amazon’s airline buddy Apollo Global. But we now know it was just as important a year for the sheer amount of essentially hand-holding in tax shit that state, local, and federal governments all handed to Amazon on a mile-long gold platter made of billions of lesser gold platters. But it was also the year of the hunt for HQ2. https://preview.redd.it/qw4crtw9uxe81.png?width=1690&format=png&auto=webp&s=c7ccba6259cab33e5d90e71af77938f4cf7a214f In 2017, Amazon poured across all the headlines with a simple statement: “We’re building a new, 2nd headquarters! But sowwy, we don’t know where we wanna put it! Help us figure it out!” It dangled the carrot of nearly $5 billion in investment for the winner, up to 50K new jobs in some places. And 238 cities and regions, under the guise of perhaps–too much faith–fought in a race to the bottom to appease Amazon even further than the 2017 tax credit already was (remember, this tax credit shit was BARELY reported on). Newark, NJ, home to Amazon subsidiary Audible, offered $7 billion in incentives, while Columbus, Ohio said ol’ Jeffrey could gave 100% absolutely no property tax for the new HQ site if it was built there in O-H-ten. https://preview.redd.it/yi1yq0oauxe81.png?width=1934&format=png&auto=webp&s=3e4766ee7d31cbf4671145e5eef438dc677dedb3 And remember it wasn’t just small towns. Cities and towns from all over the country poured in, with some teaming up together to put together bigger bids, like Milam County in Texas. The calls for Amazon to come were the common refrains: “More jobs! Save a dying tax base! Build out our tech hubs!” Some caught onto the obvious bad effects of this countrywide “wild goose chase”, like a race to the bottom for better and better tax incentives for Amazon. Remember, know you know many of which we saw Amazon was already taking full advantage of in the same year without many US citizens being none the wiser. Parts of the country snapped back at each other, like NH saying that Boston was a bad pick due to its traffic congestion and more: “Choose Boston and next year when you leave your tiny $4,000-a-month apartment only to sit in 2 hours of traffic trying to make your way to an overburdened airport, you’ll be wishing you were in New Hampshire. Or ... choose New Hampshire and invest in your high-growth future.” But eventually, the game stopped as Amazon eventually whittled down a shortlist of candidates, then offered to split its 50K jobs between 2 sites: Long Island City in Queens, NYC and Arlington, VA, home of its actual new HQ2 site (and conveniently, near Bezos’ new mansion in DC). For its Arlington location, it bought out a CMBS property as part of Blackstone’s REIT (BREIT). This deal was signed off on by Amazon’s shell company Acorn Development LLC, the secretive company that’s run ahead of them to do many of their real estate deals, including there at HQ2. (I’ve only been able to find some information about Acorn.) But what can we learn from the HQ2 race? Well, the obvious was that competition had these cities and towns knowingly or unknowingly racing to the bottom in order to give Bezos the best deal. ****** You had some handwashing after the fact of course once all over. “Amazon Unbound”, a book that partly covered the hunt for HQ2, said that Philadelphia could have even been rejected due to an Amazon exec being a NY Giants fan, rival to the local hometown Eagles. The Philadelphia Citizen tried its best to make juice out of lemons: Also, by all accounts, the HQ2 bid exercise within city government had some helpful internal benefits for bringing together a good team across departments and breaking down silos, which some city employees say has had some lasting positive effects. And the exercise also resulted in a lot of helpful research and marketing materials for the city that can be reused for non-Amazon economic development work. Yay? But here, dear apes, is the part that I wanted to focus on. It’s the part that made me go “oh shit” for a moment while researching all this. And it comes down to one word: data. Where the fuck did the HQ2 data go? this Wish-brand Lex Luthor can go fuck himself And yes, of course, dear apes, I wasn’t obviously the only one to think of this actual underhanded scenario: Amazon gained a huge perk from its HQ2 contest that's worth far more than any tax break…It has also given Amazon something that's potentially far more valuable than any subsidies it may have gleaned: a trove of data. "Amazon has a godlike view of what's happening in digital commerce, and now cities have helped give it an inside look at what's happening in terms of land use and development across the US," said Stacy Mitchell, a director of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, a think tank based in Washington, DC. "Amazon will put that data to prodigious use in the coming years to expand its empire." Amazon could use this data to aid in future expansion as it selects sites for new stores, warehouses, data centers, fulfillment centers, and other brick-and-mortar needs.In some cases, the bids could help Amazon get a leg up over its competitors, because the data they contain might not be publicly available. "This is an incredibly valuable trove of data that 238 cities spent time compiling and submitting to Amazon," Mitchell said. "At the end of the day, it may well be that the data is the most valuable thing that Amazon has gotten out of this. With all that was given, it was something that was echoed by many. It was never about the wild goose chase, but the leverage it could eventually take advantage of in the form of all of this data: "I think they had this in mind from day one," Richard Florida, a University of Toronto urban studies professor who tracked the HQ2 process, told CBS News. "This was about crowdsourcing data ... This was never about an individual HQ2." Florida called the bidding process a "game" that gave Amazon leverage on cities it could use for future business opportunities, even if those cities had little chance of winning the second headquarters…Indeed, some smaller cities that didn't meet the company's criteria for HQ2, such as a having population of at least 1 million people, submitted bids ...And some cities that made the list of 20 finalists...did not meet requirements like mass transit, but Amazon still engaged them through the final parts of the process and collected more information. In the landscape of the Amazon behemoth chipping away at retail and more commercial real estate (as it grew into buying up more warehouses too or data centers), some of the 238 cities and towns potentially gave what you would normally pay millions to research firms to find. And…they just gave it up…for free… Remember, there had been some murmurings that Jeff Bezos (C-E-O en-tre-pre-neur, born in 1964) ALREADY KNEW where he wanted to go pick their new HQ2 spot since it was near his new mansion and his newspaper. If, for example, Bezos ever wanted to pair his exhaustive customer data from Prime or Echo Dot services, he could easily pair that with the shit ton of demographic research that these places gave out, perfectly ready for Bezos to cross-reference and use. I'm sure some of you remembered this story from a fellow Lex Luthor billionare and friend of data privacy Here’s just a sample of some of the questions asked (and answered) by NYC: REQUEST FOR INFORMATION Project Clancy TALENT A. Big Questions and Big Ideas1**. Population Changes and Key Drivers.**a. Population level - Specify the changes in total population in your community and state over the last five years and the major reasons for these changes. Please also identify the majority source of inbound migration. d. Specialized tech talent availability and growth - Please provide specialized tech talent availability... Please also describe the companies in your community currently employing that talent. (i) Please also describe the companies in your community currently employing that talent and where their future growth will be. 3**. Venture Capital.** a. Current efforts - What is your community currently doing to support venture capital investment? Please include the presences of venture capital firms in your community... "if your software developer location quotient is low enough to suggest that a tech employer might struggle to recruit, but it is rapidly increasing and employers are having great success recruiting to your community right now, tell us that. (fucking really Jeffrey? "Tell us that?") Provide data on the median earnings, unemployment, home ownership, educational attainment, and undergrad enrollment gaps for underrepresented minorities in your community. Now remember not EVERY question is bathed in potential fuckery; sure, lots of other questions exist about what they hope to do to help support STEM programs at high schools, or racial initiatives. But in New York City’s case, it gave Bezos 253 pages (!) worth of free fucking data and field research without them lifting a finger. Hell, he had asked some of these cities to tell THEM what the cost of a coffee at Starbucks cost in their area, or how much an avocado or some shit cost at Whole Foods (something fucking Bezos should know if he fucking owns that company), but these cities DID ALL THE RESEARCH FOR HIM. Other proposals are more secret. In the wake of HQ2 being given to DC, the city's report heavily redacted many parts of what it told Amazon. More redaction in other parts. And remember, in this post, we’re talking commercial real estate and tax shit. Did we see things like that here? YOU FUCKING BET. REAL ESTATE - Location
Easements, Licenses, Rights of Way 9. Acquisition Cost (if any) Please describe if all or a portion of Site will be made available at no or a reduced cost to the Project. c. Estimated cost of dark fiber lease/ownership F. Transportation 1. Air a. Nearest Airport: name, distance to Site, number of passenger carrier service providers. Also include any planned, funded and approved capital improvements to the airport. From the Chula Vista, CA proposal. Planning, zoning, blah blah blah all tied up in a bow for Bezos and Amazon. For a company trying to expand its logistics monster, strategically picking sites that help give it the biggest tax breaks, sit between wealthier Prime users, and logistically set up warehouses can do everything from be 30 min to an airport or 1 min from a highway, Amazon just maliciously warp-speeded its expansion protocol under the guise of "yay you get jobs!" https://preview.redd.it/dmp5aswhuxe81.png?width=1552&format=png&auto=webp&s=0295fcfff54c00f53a6283d043890ffe49f7d7e1 So now we can project: in the same year that Amazon was already making off like a bandit from using falling real estate prices–like from malls dumping in CMBS loans during the “big mall short”–to advantageous Opportunity Zone fuckery from the 2017 tax credit bill, Bezos still wanted more and fucking got it. 7. The Akira Blob And expand it does. Many industrial spaces wouldn’t care and still don’t care, knowing there was a chance that Bezos might pay out 50-60% more per square foot, especially for industrial space. T he Amazon commercial real estate Akira blob looms over the US: of the 10 largest industrial projects this year, EIGHT are Amazon. The total space of just those 8 projects could cover a space the size of Central Park end to end. By the end of 2021, 7% of all commercial real estate sales were from Amazon: And so where does that put us? There is a possibility that certain things might exist that we might not see (and I can’t find in my research yet). This could be shit like: - We might eventually see how HQ2 data might be used if we track cities like Worcester, MA who both offered up a proposal to host HQ2, then was denied only for a few years later to have its Greendale Mall torn down in preparation for a new Amazon site. This was all while it dangled a heavy carrot for Amazon, including $500 million in local real estate tax saving.
https://preview.redd.it/fixenuriuxe81.png?width=1404&format=png&auto=webp&s=f1821f3d9783a01369115acfc5d84dfef209f11a - As we see how Amazon is weaponizing opportunity zones, like Census Tract 1523.03 in Euclid, Ohio, which we’ll see is one of the first dead malls that Amazon has started to convert to fulfillment centers.
- We might continue to see how it works through some investment deals, whether with Cerberus Capital Management or Blackstone, who set them up with their HQ2 site.
This all happens in the background of false promises from the giant. GoodJobsFirst’s stellar tracker shows how bad these "job" promises are: “This…tallies state and local economic development subsidy deals given to Amazon.com, Inc. for its warehouses, data centers, and film productions, and to its subsidiaries…Since we began collecting and exposing subsidies the company has received, we have encountered greater secrecy surrounding the packages awarded to Amazon. This sometimes makes calculating such costs difficult. Secret project names, non-disclosure agreements, and a reluctance by public officials to fully disclose costs -- even after a deal has been awarded -- suggests Amazon and public officials know these deals have become controversial.” So remember this is all happening to these cities, these towns, is unbelievable. Under the false promises of expansion, Ohio is one state that unfortunately got to fucking over its own statespeople the most. For Amazon’s workers, even though its only the 53rd biggest employer in Ohio, nearly 1 in 10 of them are on food stamps. A three data center deal for Amazon in Ohio gave it no taxes for 15 years ($77 million). This is all as one EPI report said that an Amazon fulfillment center does nothing really for local employment, is wholly inefficient for job growth…all it does is replace 1 person working at a local spot for a job at an Amazon warehouse, giving near net-zero gain: So adding it a bit altogether, we know that hedge funds like Apollo can not only short its competitors (GME), bet against everyday American’s malls, all while along with Amazon its makes money hand over fisting all of us from billions in free tax giveaways, all while using tricks to give itself even more free tax giveaways? https://preview.redd.it/i5w4j2wjuxe81.png?width=1252&format=png&auto=webp&s=91a0d6ec169eff5bb47213b1c5929382ee77977b This is the dark shadow that we’ll all have had to have known hovers in the background to our continued story of CMBS and commercial real estate, to see how Amazon’s gain is helped by retailer’s loss, whether anchor stores, or yes, even GameStop. submitted by throwawaylurker012 to DDintoGME [link] [comments] |
2022.01.31 03:24 throwawaylurker012 The Big Mall Short #6: Amazon and How Jeff Bezos Helped Main Street America to Shoot Itself in the Dick
| TL;DR: - Bezos' Amazon has links to Apollo Global ("mall shorter") with their air logistics network (Amazon Air).
- For years, Amazon/Bezos have taken advantage of subsidies/tax to the order $4 Billion. One trick involves opportunity zones, which Amazon can buy warehouses and wealthy investors (hedgies?) can invest in to not pay capital gains. An incoming fulfilment center can give 0 net jobs to a community.
- The hunt for a second headquarters HQ2, caused 238 cities to give up their data to Amazon, which it can now use to aggressively buy real estate and capitalize on more free money & tax subsidies, using this data against those very same cities.
https://preview.redd.it/tkng3a2a9xe81.png?width=1200&format=png&auto=webp&s=01754b1354e18360a7825c74db14a5150c14068f This is the Big Mall Short. In previous posts, I talked about how diving into Tuesday Morning being shorted to shit (92 days to cover) on its old ticker made me find its connections to CMBS loans. In Pt. 4, we figured out who was shorting American malls using a short bet against CMBX.6. This included Carl Icahn, Apollo Global (who tried buying GME in 2019), Mudrick (with ties to sticky floor), and MP Partners. I n Pt. 5 we made the discovery of balls deep GME exposure in CMBX.6: arguably over 77% of #6 malls had GME stores in them, adding more credence to that GME’s naked shorting could have tied into the “big mall short”. If you recall from Pt. 2, CMBS--or commercial mortgage backed securities--are a grab bag of loans to different offices, retail stores, and commercial real estate that you can buy or sell, or bet whether the price of all those leases will be paid off as those spaces do business. They’re often tied in with signed leases to these spots. If many of those offices, retail stores, and commercial real estate spots fail, welp then they can’t pay their lease and the entire grab bag (CMBS) might go down. These leases can be made to offices or factories, but they can also be made to retail stores like Tuesday Morning or GameStop. We also learned before that these loans can be bundled into bigger bundles (think the Jenga towers from "The Big Short") and can be bought, sold, cut up, or even be bet for or bet against (short). We've been looking at CMBX, which bundles many CMBS loans together. (For example, CMBX.6 contains GameStop, and was shorted against by some.) I n this post, we circle back to a company and owner we are all very aware of, and how they might be gaming the whole system of commercial real estate to their benefit, all while fellow Americans looking out for their towns and cities ended up hurting themselves, all none the wiser. We can't tell the story of Amazon and malls, without telling the story of Amazon and commercial real estate first. Sections - Bezos Buddies
- Amazon & Apollo, Sitting in a Tree
- Amazon Air
- The Network
- How They’re Fucking Us: Racks on Racks on Racks, No Tax No Tax No Tax
- HQ2: The Greatest Trick That Jeff Bezos Ever Pulled
- The Akira Blob
1. Bezos Buddies In Pt. 4, we saw how Carl Icahn and hedge funds looked to bet against CMBX.6, or "shorting" the malls inside (“the big mall short”). From that cast of characters, I did try to dig to see if there were any commercial real estate (or even retail CMBS links) that connected the “mall shorters” to Amazon outside of what we know many rich & hedge funds do: invest in Amazon's stock to make their balance sheet look good, or just to keep Marge from calling. Now sorry to disappoint in many ways. They all pretty much didn’t have any links. The second closest I could find was Mudrick Capital (who tried to "death spiral finance" sticky floor while it had its "mall short" position open) and its acquisition of Topps through its “MUDS” SPAC (special purpose acquisition company). Topps is a #10 retail item on Amazon’s website…and that’s it. That's the only link I found. Sad face. https://preview.redd.it/fi8940eumxe81.png?width=2036&format=png&auto=webp&s=a56b643dc5abd2f684b6678aa1267c13b481cc3c But remember, I said “second closest”. So let’s step back from Mudrick and turn our eyes to someone else: Leon Black’s Apollo Global. If you’re wondering whether Amazon has any links to this SHF betting on “the big mall short”, then you bet your sweet candy buttcheeks they are. 2. Amazon & Apollo, Sitting in a Tree https://preview.redd.it/c24od4nymxe81.png?width=260&format=png&auto=webp&s=b8b0b96b2550ea62cd2f5b5dcd6972f16dae1c93 Apollo Global–who tried buying GME in 2019 with Sycamore, tried to “help” finance sticky floor with Mudrick Capital and D1 Partners, and was shorting malls in CMBX.6–had, at one point, been competing with Amazon in the web server space back in the day. Apollo Global bought Rackspace out from under Amazon’s nose back in 2016 as AWS was trying to expand. While Amazon bought out Whole Foods, Apollo tried to turn around FreshDirect & Sprouts. Apollo also pulled Amazon’s Carletta Ooton for their ESG. But Apollo Global and Amazon don’t always compete, especially recently. After Apollo recently threw nearly 2 billion at another grocer, Albertson’s, in the US, in July 2021 Apollo was eyeing UK foodshop Morrison’s, who partnered with Amazon. In June 2021 (a month after that bid for Morrison’s, Apollo also set up $750 million in credit facilities (money to lend) in part for aggregators of Amazon’s 3rd-party sellers. And remember Rackspace? Turns out in 2020, rumors began that Amazon might buy a minority stake in the company. Those rumors grew as of a few months ago into rumors that Amazon might engage in a wholesale buyout of Rackspace from Apollo Global. Rackspace, for your reference, is a huge player in Amazon's Web Services, which makes Bezos & co. more money than pretty much anything else Amazon offers, including Prime. https://preview.redd.it/7w1vobewnxe81.png?width=547&format=png&auto=webp&s=d36557fe8bebad8da2e55e6ebdc8d8cbebf6921c So surprisingly, there’s a shit ton of wine-ing, dining, and 69'ing between these two recently. But this pairing's true heart lies in the backscreen of Amazon's operations. For these two, it was logistics. And that logistics came in the form of an airline. 3. Amazon Air \"Wee here I come Jeffy babe!\"--Leon Black, Apollo Global Between 2019 to 2020, Amazon settled on a partnership deal with airline Sun Country, which is owned by Apollo Global. Sun Country, which went public last year so that it could trade on the stock market, had to originally delay its IPO due to Covid. Sun Country was a smaller low-cost & cargo regional airline. Most people have never heard of it, but a lot of you might know of at least one link to it. Remember that Braniff airplane at the end credits of old South Park episodes? Fun fact, it was former Braniff airlines staff actually came together to form Sun Country in the 80s. You can kinda see the similarity with Sun Country's old plane above Sun Country teamed up with Amazon to accelerate its air shipping distribution in Amazon Air, as it continued to deliver keep retail competitors on the ropes. Sun Country would use its 10 Boeing 737s to support Amazon’s package delivery, while Amazon Air continued to expand. It was in the midst of that expansion that the Treasury Dept. also gave $45 million to Amazon & Apollo’s Sun Country during the pandemic in an emergency aid loan. (And this is all while Apollo Global also benefited from at LEAST 1 other bailout during Covid.) Sun Country’s loan was part of the emergency airline aid package approved in March 2020. It had applied for the money so it wouldn’t have to ask Apollo Global and Amazon for money (ugh), but being fair, it eventually paid back this loan about a year later. https://preview.redd.it/nfjhjgkqexe81.png?width=1280&format=png&auto=webp&s=6af5c250a7b27000ef4932ac180c44d38f67f1c9 Well fuck’s sake, so we at least know there is some perhaps benefit to someone like Apollo Global in “the big mall short”. If it’s bet turned out right, it was positioned to help Amazon speed up its retail overthrow through Amazon Air & Sun Country speeding up its deliveries. This was while looking at more and more Prime orders, adjusting the logistics ever so much as you might need to send a package from a California warehouse to a Texas one to be able to get it to someone's front door. But of course, we’re here to talk commercial real estate, so let’s start with where commercial real estate and Amazon mainly collide: fulfillment centers. 4. The Network https://preview.redd.it/c4e6xwgbfxe81.png?width=760&format=png&auto=webp&s=c1a7830e4eaa1fb8f02776ec167c2b4b216c5cf8 If Amazon Air has become the new airborne mech warrior exoskeleton of Amazon & Prime’s logistic network (courtesy of Apollo and Sun Country), then its fulfillment center network--including its trucking and distribution arms--has been its spine and nerves. Amazon has been BALLS DEEP in expansion across the US countryside, inching across like a retail-killing Akira blob while snapping up commercial real estate at every turn. For starters: about right now in the US, it’s standing at about 338 fulfillment centers for packing, 666 delivery station networks for distributing, 80 Prime Now hubs, 101 regional sortation centers, alongside its Amazon Air-affiliated 18 airport hubs & 34 inbound cross docks. Now most US apes are familiar with fulfillment centers either from seeing them from a distance at home or on a drive, or–unfortunately, more often–when things go wrong. Whether it’s Amazon shuttling down unions outside its gates or keeping its workers from escaping an oncoming tornado at its Edwardsville, IL site (STL6) in a horrendous tragedy and loss of life, knowledge of Amazon’s fulfillment stores have permeated the news cycle in ways that other retailers' distribution networks might not have. The biggest takeaway of the fulfillment center network and its growing grid of commercial real estate is that there’s a method to Bezos’ fulfillment center madness, no matter how nondescript they seem: most are purposely located near places where people have more extra/discretionary income to order from Prime, with many warehouses clustered near highway arteries between big cities. These warehouses are purposely clustered near places with more Prime subscribers, and ALL warehouses are located within a 20 minute drive from a major highway. In some cases, it’s even less than a ONE minute drive from a highway. And with our talk of the Apollo-aided Amazon Air, across the entire country the average Amazon truck can get to an airport that can service its deliveries in less than 35 minutes. Now I tried looking at what I THOUGHT was the full list of fulfillment centers to figure what details I could track from its commercial real estate history. But from my small sample of 110, I found that most fulfillment centers were built in all different spaces, be it completely empty land lots, or spaces up for sale such as medical buildings, ranchland, old storage space, or even nursing homes. So whether razing a private school (Opa Locka, FL) or a golf course combo country club (Livermore, NY), they weren’t propping up JUST in a specific type of place (even if I wanted it to be JUST malls to feed my confirmation bias).But in my research it's easy to see that these fulfillment centers, spilling off the spokes of Amazon Air's flight patterns, all connected into a grander view of Amazon's angle of attack into commercial real estate. And the story of how many of these acquisitions for Amazon's fulfillment centers come to be led me to the great Vinnie from “The Big Short”s grand philosophical question... Hey Amazon, how are you fucking us? 5. How They’re Fucking Us: Racks on Racks on Racks, No Tax No Tax No Tax Look, I–as well as most of you apes–could write a fucking 2000 page book if we wanted on just how bad Bezos and Amazon has been fucking the US and the world if we wanted to. And there are 6969696969 more reasons than this one (j fc I mean another story literally just dropped while I was writing this about child laboslavery in China for how Amazon makes its Echo devices). But I’m here to focus on commercial real estate, and show you just how Bezos liked to fuck us there with no mayo lube for years. Here’s one of the biggest ways that Bezos and commercial real estate intersect: free money & no tax. And guess how and where that eventual missing tax comes from to balance the books from all that commercial real estate SWAG Amazon gets? People like you. As of 2021, US states and cities have given $4.2 BILLION USD–and counting!--in subsidies (think “free money”) to Amazon. For Bezos, this rapid fuckery of tax greediness began exactly 10 years ago, ironically the same year that the CMBX.6 “mall bundle” was first made: The company’s aggressive behavior seeking tax breaks and subsidy deals took off in 2012, when it hired a veteran incentives consultant and created an office within its public policy department to specialize in getting “corporate welfare.” Before 2012, Amazon had not received more than three awards per year; since 2012, it has averaged 19 per year. Saying Amazon “grew” over time puts it lightly, especially without mentioning this little wrinkle. All this no tax to Amazon comes from during its massive metric fuck ton of expansion, specifically in commercial real estate. Just how much expansion was it? I n just TWO YEARS, it went from about 470 warehouses in Dec. 2019 to over 1200 as of last month. (This effectively doubled how much square footage they cover in the country.) So it nearly TRIPLED the number of warehouses (fulfillment centers & distribution centers) during the pandemic all while taking advantage of billions of tax subsidies. Literally, Jeff should be THANKING YOU AMERICAN TAXPAYER APES FOR HELPING PROP UP HIS COMPANY DURING A PANDEMIC: About 1/10th of those 1200 sites helped Amazon by can kicking Amazon’s property tax, sales tax, income tax, fast-tracked its approvals, and even gave ol’ Jeffrey discounts on the land & commercial real estate he bought up. And this was part of the game plan pretty much from Amazon’s day-one transition to 2-day delivery and faster. In 2012, for example, Amazon would purposely put fulfillment centers in places where it could safely avoid having to give up sales tax in those states. It fiercely resisted this until it could no longer under the huge burst of Prime orders, even running up a tab of $269 million in uncollected taxes in Texas (!) But once 2017 kicked in, Amazon had to start paying sales tax for orders from states with sales tax. So were they ok with paying? FUCK NO. They quickly sought every opportunity they could. Guess where some salvation came? In a 2017 federal tax credit bill that unleashed lavish gift baskets to Bezos & friends, all thanks to commercial real estate and CMBS shit. https://preview.redd.it/15ipphslmxe81.png?width=2052&format=png&auto=webp&s=bd10947e49aeccf8b14dc68e406e8a8e092ed10a A mazon located at least 171 (!) of its newest or upcoming warehouses in Opportunity Zones (OZ) throughout the US. These opportunity zones in over 30 states, which are usually meant to spur “investment”, are INSTEAD often used to hide capital gains for companies and investors like those of Amazon . When these zones first started, nearly $2.3 trillion by the wealthy was hidden away in them under the guise of “investing in real estate and business projects”. So rich fucks–like Apollo Global, Mudrick, Stevie Cohen, Yass, or Ken Cordelle Griffin–can theoretically make capital gains (sometimes from crime shit as we’ve seen). Now if the same rich fucksticks reinvest those gains back into these zones, guess what? Your tax rate goes down even more! You can kick the can on when you pay it too! And the winner? Any NEW capital gains from those second round of reinvestments are COMPLETELY TAX-FREE! So that means as long as your cash gains respawn in one of these zones like a Call of Duty Vantage map at least twice, pretty much no IRS visit at all! And imagine how much cheaper this is to do and take advantage of a law during a pandemic, when fucking the price of EVERY commercial real estate asset–malls, land, offices–has fallen a shit ton? “Amazon has elevated industrial in the eyes of investors…Once the ‘ugly duckling’ of the CRE space, industrial is now the top asset class and draws global investors, not just market specific investors. ...Investors want assets with stable tenants that will grow and produce strong returns. Buildings with tenants such as Amazon…it that bill and are in hot demand.” How fucked is this? Remember that Illinois tornado? W**ell, the state of Illinois ALONE has given nearly fucking $742 MILLION in tax subsidies to Amazon, a company that literally did nothing as it had locked its citizens inside and left them to die. In fact, that state is sooo bad that Illinois’ tax subsidies to Amazon are nearly 1/5th to 1/6th of ALL US state and local gimmes to Amazon.**And it’s not just Illinois of course. Here’s how bad Fresno, California did: “The three [Amazon] facilities shown here are located in an "industrial triangle," with easy access to California’s Central Valley region via three major highways. The warehouse is less than a mile from a highway entrance and 15 minutes from the nearest airport. Nevertheless, Fresno approved up to $30 million in tax rebates and discounts for Amazon. That's 30 years of sales tax revenue plus a 90% property tax abatement lost to one of California’s neediest cities…With its insatiable appetite for public subsidies, Amazon is disinvesting communities for short-term profits,...But because Opportunity Zone investors are mostly secret and undisclosed, we cannot estimate the direct or indirect subsidies to Amazon created via OZs.”** So to add to the fuckery, not only is Amazon grabbing a shit ton of free money in small town to big US federal subsidy tricks, which most of us DIDN’T EVEN KNOW EXISTED, but we don’t even know WHO IN THE WEALTHY FUCK is helping invest in these to get out of capital gains taxes or even get collateral on their books in the form of commercial real estate? Amazon now holds more than $58 million worth of land and buildings, more than any other public company except Walmart. 6. HQ2: The Greatest Trick That Jeff Bezos Ever Pulled In Pt. 3, we talked about how important the year 2017 was to the “big mall short”. It was the year everyone piled in, including Alder Hill, Mudrick, Carl Icahn, MP Partners, and Amazon’s airline buddy Apollo Global. But we now know it was just as important a year for the sheer amount of essentially hand-holding in tax shit that state, local, and federal governments all handed to Amazon on a mile-long gold platter made of billions of lesser gold platters. But it was also the year of the hunt for HQ2. https://preview.redd.it/5htdv3elnxe81.png?width=1690&format=png&auto=webp&s=6628a4e8cd25072e1bec67bf5e4b888db590a1b6 In 2017, Amazon poured across all the headlines with a simple statement: “We’re building a new, 2nd headquarters! But sowwy, we don’t know where we wanna put it! Help us figure it out!” It dangled the carrot of nearly $5 billion in investment for the winner, up to 50K new jobs in some places. And 238 cities and regions, under the guise of perhaps–too much faith–fought in a race to the bottom to appease Amazon even further than the 2017 tax credit already was (remember, this tax credit shit was BARELY reported on). Newark, NJ, home to Amazon subsidiary Audible, offered $7 billion in incentives, while Columbus, Ohio said ol’ Jeffrey could gave 100% absolutely no property tax for the new HQ site if it was built there in O-H-ten. https://preview.redd.it/sbwppjcylxe81.png?width=1934&format=png&auto=webp&s=987570bbfd0d9b20456a76a49add922f4e44e490 And remember it wasn’t just small towns. Cities and towns from all over the country poured in, with some teaming up together to put together bigger bids, like Milam County in Texas. The calls for Amazon to come were the common refrains: “More jobs! Save a dying tax base! Build out our tech hubs!” Some caught onto the obvious bad effects of this countrywide “wild goose chase”, like a race to the bottom for better and better tax incentives for Amazon. Remember, know you know many of which we saw Amazon was already taking full advantage of in the same year without many US citizens being none the wiser. Parts of the country snapped back at each other, like NH saying that Boston was a bad pick due to its traffic congestion and more: “Choose Boston and next year when you leave your tiny $4,000-a-month apartment only to sit in 2 hours of traffic trying to make your way to an overburdened airport, you’ll be wishing you were in New Hampshire. Or ... choose New Hampshire and invest in your high-growth future.” But eventually, the game stopped as Amazon eventually whittled down a shortlist of candidates, then offered to split its 50K jobs between 2 sites: Long Island City in Queens, NYC and Arlington, VA, home of its actual new HQ2 site (and conveniently, near Bezos’ new mansion in DC). For its Arlington location, it bought out a CMBS property as part of Blackstone’s REIT (BREIT). This deal was signed off on by Amazon’s shell company Acorn Development LLC, the secretive company that’s run ahead of them to do many of their real estate deals, including there at HQ2. (I’ve only been able to find some information about Acorn.) But what can we learn from the HQ2 race? Well, the obvious was that competition had these cities and towns knowingly or unknowingly racing to the bottom in order to give Bezos the best deal. ****** You had some handwashing after the fact of course once all over. “Amazon Unbound”, a book that partly covered the hunt for HQ2, said that Philadelphia could have even been rejected due to an Amazon exec being a NY Giants fan, rival to the local hometown Eagles. The Philadelphia Citizen tried its best to make juice out of lemons: Also, by all accounts, the HQ2 bid exercise within city government had some helpful internal benefits for bringing together a good team across departments and breaking down silos, which some city employees say has had some lasting positive effects. And the exercise also resulted in a lot of helpful research and marketing materials for the city that can be reused for non-Amazon economic development work. Yay? But here, dear apes, is the part that I wanted to focus on. It’s the part that made me go “oh shit” for a moment while researching all this. And it comes down to one word: data. Where the fuck did the HQ2 data go? this Wish-brand Lex Luthor can go fuck himself And yes, of course, dear apes, I wasn’t obviously the only one to think of this actual underhanded scenario: Amazon gained a huge perk from its HQ2 contest that's worth far more than any tax break…It has also given Amazon something that's potentially far more valuable than any subsidies it may have gleaned: a trove of data. "Amazon has a godlike view of what's happening in digital commerce, and now cities have helped give it an inside look at what's happening in terms of land use and development across the US," said Stacy Mitchell, a director of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, a think tank based in Washington, DC. "Amazon will put that data to prodigious use in the coming years to expand its empire." Amazon could use this data to aid in future expansion as it selects sites for new stores, warehouses, data centers, fulfillment centers, and other brick-and-mortar needs.In some cases, the bids could help Amazon get a leg up over its competitors, because the data they contain might not be publicly available. "This is an incredibly valuable trove of data that 238 cities spent time compiling and submitting to Amazon," Mitchell said. "At the end of the day, it may well be that the data is the most valuable thing that Amazon has gotten out of this. With all that was given, it was something that was echoed by many. It was never about the wild goose chase, but the leverage it could eventually take advantage of in the form of all of this data: "I think they had this in mind from day one," Richard Florida, a University of Toronto urban studies professor who tracked the HQ2 process, told CBS News. "This was about crowdsourcing data ... This was never about an individual HQ2." Florida called the bidding process a "game" that gave Amazon leverage on cities it could use for future business opportunities, even if those cities had little chance of winning the second headquarters…Indeed, some smaller cities that didn't meet the company's criteria for HQ2, such as a having population of at least 1 million people, submitted bids ...And some cities that made the list of 20 finalists...did not meet requirements like mass transit, but Amazon still engaged them through the final parts of the process and collected more information. In the landscape of the Amazon behemoth chipping away at retail and more commercial real estate (as it grew into buying up more warehouses too or data centers), some of the 238 cities and towns potentially gave what you would normally pay millions to research firms to find. And…they just gave it up…for free… Remember, there had been some murmurings that Jeff Bezos (C-E-O en-tre-pre-neur, born in 1964) ALREADY KNEW where he wanted to go pick their new HQ2 spot since it was near his new mansion and his newspaper. If, for example, Bezos ever wanted to pair his exhaustive customer data from Prime or Echo Dot services, he could easily pair that with the shit ton of demographic research that these places gave out, perfectly ready for Bezos to cross-reference and use. I'm sure some of you remembered this story from a fellow Lex Luthor billionare and friend of data privacy Here’s just a sample of some of the questions asked (and answered) by NYC: REQUEST FOR INFORMATION Project Clancy TALENT A. Big Questions and Big Ideas1**. Population Changes and Key Drivers.**a. Population level - Specify the changes in total population in your community and state over the last five years and the major reasons for these changes. Please also identify the majority source of inbound migration. d. Specialized tech talent availability and growth - Please provide specialized tech talent availability... Please also describe the companies in your community currently employing that talent. (i) Please also describe the companies in your community currently employing that talent and where their future growth will be. 3**. Venture Capital.** a. Current efforts - What is your community currently doing to support venture capital investment? Please include the presences of venture capital firms in your community... "if your software developer location quotient is low enough to suggest that a tech employer might struggle to recruit, but it is rapidly increasing and employers are having great success recruiting to your community right now, tell us that. (fucking really Jeffrey? "Tell us that?") Provide data on the median earnings, unemployment, home ownership, educational attainment, and undergrad enrollment gaps for underrepresented minorities in your community. Now remember not EVERY question is bathed in potential fuckery; sure, lots of other questions exist about what they hope to do to help support STEM programs at high schools, or racial initiatives. But in New York City’s case, it gave Bezos 253 pages (!) worth of free fucking data and field research without them lifting a finger. Hell, he had asked some of these cities to tell THEM what the cost of a coffee at Starbucks cost in their area, or how much an avocado or some shit cost at Whole Foods (something fucking Bezos should know if he fucking owns that company), but these cities DID ALL THE RESEARCH FOR HIM. Other proposals are more secret. In the wake of HQ2 being given to DC, the city's report heavily redacted many parts of what it told Amazon. More redaction in other parts And remember, in this post, we’re talking commercial real estate and tax shit. Did we see things like that here? YOU FUCKING BET. REAL ESTATE - Location Easements, Licenses, Rights of Way
9. Acquisition Cost (if any) Please describe if all or a portion of Site will be made available at no or a reduced cost to the Project. c. Estimated cost of dark fiber lease/ownership F. Transportation 1. Air a. Nearest Airport: name, distance to Site, number of passenger carrier service providers. Also include any planned, funded and approved capital improvements to the airport. From the Chula Vista, CA proposal Planning, zoning, blah blah blah all tied up in a bow for Bezos and Amazon. For a company trying to expand its logistics monster, strategically picking sites that help give it the biggest tax breaks, sit between wealthier Prime users, and logistically set up warehouses can do everything from be 30 min to an airport or 1 min from a highway, Amazon just maliciously warp-speeded its expansion protocol under the guise of "yay you get jobs!" https://preview.redd.it/932ggdgqlxe81.png?width=1552&format=png&auto=webp&s=60b8b065e0aeb13c787316c38a73e09b5dc9b23f So now we can project: in the same year that Amazon was already making off like a bandit from using falling real estate prices–like from malls dumping in CMBS loans during the “big mall short”–to advantageous Opportunity Zone fuckery from the 2017 tax credit bill, Bezos still wanted more and fucking got it. 7. The Akira Blob And expand it does. Many industrial spaces wouldn’t care and still don’t care, knowing there was a chance that Bezos might pay out 50-60% more per square foot, especially for industrial space. T he Amazon commercial real estate Akira blob looms over the US: of the 10 largest industrial projects this year, EIGHT are Amazon. The total space of just those 8 projects could cover a space the size of Central Park end to end. By the end of 2021, 7% of all commercial real estate sales were from Amazon: And so where does that put us? There is a possibility that certain things might exist that we might not see (and I can’t find in my research yet). This could be shit like: - We might eventually see how HQ2 data might be used if we track cities like Worcester, MA who both offered up a proposal to host HQ2, then was denied only for a few years later to have its Greendale Mall torn down in preparation for a new Amazon site. This was all while it dangled a heavy carrot for Amazon, including $500 million in local real estate tax saving.
- As we see how Amazon is weaponizing opportunity zones, like Census Tract 1523.03 in Euclid, Ohio, which we’ll see is one of the first dead malls that Amazon has started to convert to fulfillment centers.
https://preview.redd.it/p1jnhz7nlxe81.png?width=1404&format=png&auto=webp&s=b46bf64bff73888b618512a62e38ddbdf16c404e - We might continue to see how it works through some investment deals, whether with Cerberus Capital Management or Blackstone, who set them up with their HQ2 site.
This all happens in the background of false promises from the giant. GoodJobsFirst’s stellar tracker shows how bad these "job" promises are: “This…tallies state and local economic development subsidy deals given to Amazon.com, Inc. for its warehouses, data centers, and film productions, and to its subsidiaries…Since we began collecting and exposing subsidies the company has received, we have encountered greater secrecy surrounding the packages awarded to Amazon. This sometimes makes calculating such costs difficult. Secret project names, non-disclosure agreements, and a reluctance by public officials to fully disclose costs -- even after a deal has been awarded -- suggests Amazon and public officials know these deals have become controversial.” So remember this is all happening to these cities, these towns, is unbelievable. Under the false promises of expansion, Ohio is one state that unfortunately got to fucking over its own statespeople the most. For Amazon’s workers, even though its only the 53rd biggest employer in Ohio, nearly 1 in 10 of them are on food stamps. A three data center deal for Amazon in Ohio gave it no taxes for 15 years ($77 million). This is all as one EPI report said that an Amazon fulfillment center does nothing really for local employment, is wholly inefficient for job growth…all it does is replace 1 person working at a local spot for a job at an Amazon warehouse, giving near net-zero gain: https://preview.redd.it/3imdkj03mxe81.png?width=1252&format=png&auto=webp&s=b7fa0eaa6e8524a98e65369969f8c177207a2594 So adding it a bit altogether, we know that hedge funds like Apollo can not only short its competitors (GME), bet against everyday American’s malls, all while along with Amazon its makes money hand over fisting all of us from billions in free tax giveaways, all while using tricks to give itself even more free tax giveaways? This is the dark shadow that we’ll all have had to have known hovers in the background to our continued story of CMBS and commercial real estate, to see how Amazon’s gain is helped by retailer’s loss, whether anchor stores, or yes, even GameStop. submitted by throwawaylurker012 to Superstonk [link] [comments] |
2021.10.20 09:24 Sorkiy8 Holiday Inn Express and Suites Edwardsville, Edwardsville
2021.07.06 08:11 robotco The top 10 games from each year from the past 100 years, according to BGG rankings
only games that have a ranking were included. some years do not have ranked games.
1920
17222 - Pogs
1921
4869 - Tipp-Kick
1922
1923
1924
1925
719 - Bridge
12102 - Tri-Tactics
20632 - Elfer raus!
1926
1927
20670 - Trap the Cap
20880 - Cootie
1928
1929
15204 - Escalado
20883 - Sorry!
1930
2186 - Oh Hell!
5658 - Nertz
5996 - Camelot
6233 - Belote
7787 - Barbu
7939 - Contract Rummy
14130 - Klabberjass
16107 - Tangrams Competitive Party Game
18924 - Wahoo
20038 - Weltreise
1931
20593 - Battleships
20877 - Battleship
1932
3718 - Rod Hockey
19382 - Finance
19824 - The Laughing Pig
1933
17104 - Lexicon
20111 - Tell Me: The Grand Quiz Game
20890 - Monopoly
1934
19551 - Kan-U-Go
20825 - Slap Jack
1935
18189 - Whot
18688 - El Palé
19539 - Capitaly
19990 - Magic Robot Quiz Game
20053 - Touring England
20447 - Easy Money
20691 - Deutschlandreise
1936
15478 - Hexagonal Chess
20225 - Das kaufmännishe Talent
20752 - Go to the Head of the Class
1937
8517 - American Mah Jongg
15345 - Stock Ticker
17191 - Tripoley
17722 - Mr.Ree!: The Fireside Detective
17833 - Star Reporter
1938
1738 - Spades
6769 - Totopoly
8859 - Buccaneer
17644 - Autobridge
17773 - Speed
18274 - BAS-KET
1939
3342 - Canasta
15744 - Michigan Rummy
18170 - Contack
1940
11476 - Rummoli
16461 - Machiavelli
18153 - Conflict
20595 - Game of the States
20677 - Spare Time Bowling
20847 - Labyrinth
1941
11946 - All-Star Baseball
16978 - Foto-Electric Football
1942
3446 - Hex
12019 - Nok-Hockey
19207 - Estanciero
1943
8949 - Super Farmer
20719 - Tjuv och polis
1944
1945
12204 - Jägerso
1946
2605 - Stratego
17499 - Rich Uncle
1947
1763 - Subbuteo
18876 - Qubic
1948
1852 - Scrabble
20636 - Electric Football
1949
8730 - Clue
13822 - Subbuteo Cricket
20411 - Finans
20895 - Candy Land
1950
10369 - Flutter
11404 - Contraband
18351 - Park and Shop
18392 - Stap op
1951
5094 - APBA Pro Baseball
20853 - Afrikan tähti
1952
12214 - Wembley
15835 - Stadium Checkers
19202 - Blockhead!
19874 - The Merry Game of Floundering
1953
7187 - The Game of Y
16704 - Skunk
17318 - Scoop
20527 - 3D Tic Tac Toe
20779 - Bondespelet
1954
7322 - Mille Bornes
8177 - Bali
9042 - Rome & Carthage
12526 - Astron
17709 - Das Jagdspiel
18037 - Monopoly: Popular Edition
20638 - Explore Europe
1955
5815 - Careers
10207 - Carla Cat
13637 - Bantu
17933 - Sjörövarön
19554 - Test Match
1956
5027 - Eleusis
6257 - Rack-O
10209 - Perquackey
10704 - Jotto
14848 - Troke
16765 - Wide World
19166 - Wangaratta
19336 - Spill and Spell
20709 - Yahtzee
1957
20127 - Curious George Match-a-Balloon Game
20812 - Don't Spill the Beans
1958
7169 - 5ive Straight
10683 - APBA Pro Football
14936 - Gettysburg
14975 - Why
15925 - Dispatcher
18196 - RSVP
19582 - Concentration
20388 - Tactics II
20798 - Scrabble Junior
1959
628 - Diplomacy
4745 - Piratenbillard
5401 - Football Strategy
12407 - Royalty
17011 - U-Boat
17895 - Die grosse Auktion
18785 - Yum
18862 - Long Cours
19334 - The Rolling Moon
20022 - Risk
1960
1871 - Dutch Blitz
3571 - Bughouse Chess
7239 - Yacht Race
10628 - Board and Table Games from Many Civilizations
13427 - Baseball Strategy
13731 - Trade Winds
13864 - Kimbo
14495 - Lie Detector
15534 - Gazza! The Game
15541 - Squatter
notable misses: Hi Ho! Cherry-O, The Game of Life
1961
10750 - Broker
11600 - Le Mans
11733 - D-Day
15109 - Battle-Cry
15637 - Summit
15880 - Civil War Game 1863
16154 - Air Empire
16359 - Chancellorville
16633 - Civil War
18065 - Go: The International Travel Game
1962
1467 - Strat-O-Matic Baseball
2003 - Twixt
4072 - Formula-1
4807 - Password
5456 - Harry's Grand Slam Baseball
5542 - Dogfight
6178 - Bismarck
6921 - Broadside
9344 - Waterloo
9388 - Square Mile
notable misses: Aggravation
1963
3795 - Focus
4685 - Breakaway Rider
6206 - Scarabeo
8245 - Stock Market Game
9200 - Stalingrad
11895 - Krypto
12069 - Haggle
13854 - What's That on My Head?
15281 - Equations
15396 - The Match Game
notable misses: Kismet, Mouse Trap
1964
280 - Acquire
3478 - Midway
4672 - Afrika Korps
5106 - Facts in Five
8675 - Probe
10054 - Quinto
11113 - Oh-Wah-Ree
11453 - So Long Sucker
11672 - Stocks & Bonds
14282 - Phalanx
notable misses: Pie Face
1965
2973 - Nuclear War
6935 - The Battle of the Bulge
7659 - Blitzkrieg
10779 - Breakthru
10880 - The Business Game
11050 - High-Bid
11909 - Kaiser
12353 - Call My Bluff
12965 - Avalanche
17261 - James Bond 007
notable misses: Mystery Date, Operation, Trouble
1966
3081 - Win, Place & Show
8612 - Coup d'État
9531 - Thinking Man's Golf
10806 - Fight in the Skies
13023 - Guadalcanal
15470 - Switchboard
15828 - Magellan
18154 - Thinking Man's Football
20093 - The Game of Shakespeare
20875 - Twister
1967
2409 - Bazaar
4518 - Jutland
4658 - Feudal
4814 - Regatta
6009 - Mr. President
6720 - Score Four
13190 - Sprouts
14283 - Monkey Auto Races
15132 - Ratrace
15136 - Nile
notable misses: Skip-Bo, Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots, Ker Plunk
1968
3940 - Strat-O-Matic Pro Football
7027 - Battling Tops
7984 - Situation 4
9533 - Kaliko
10407 - Sherco's Grand Slam Baseball Game
10503 - Djambi
10941 - International Movie Maker
11463 - MeM
12681 - The Battle of Britain
13750 - RisiKo!
notable misses: Don't Break the Ice
1969
3351 - Lines of Action
3752 - Anzio
3804 - Venture
5258 - Bowling Solitaire
5666 - Monad
10183 - Playboss
11010 - Barbarossa: The Russo-German War 1941-45
11200 - Wu Hsing
13545 - Origins of World War I
14129 - Hang on Harvey!
notable misses: Ants in the Pants
1970
2568 - PanzerBlitz
3872 - Paydirt
6210 - NFL Strategy
6599 - Ploy
8330 - Bridgette
9768 - Masterpiece
10460 - The Flight of the Goeben
11048 - Mini Shogi
12808 - Joker Marbles
12967 - Quandary
1971
1255 - Sleuth
2294 - Speed Circuit
3601 - Statis Pro Baseball
4271 - Napoleon at Waterloo
6310 - Alexander the Great
7234 - Executive Decision
7327 - Trireme
8081 - Origins of World War II
9329 - Landslide
10713 - Strategy I: Strategic Warfare 350BC to 1984
notable misses: Mastermind, Crossfire, UNO
1972
2339 - Boggle
2910 - Quebec 1759
3882 - What's My Word?
4847 - Statis Pro Basketball
5594 - Winter War: The Russo-Finnish Conflict
5869 - Sports Illustrated Baseball
5891 - Richthofen's War
6458 - Ultimate Mastermind
7390 - Soldiers: Tactical Combat in 1914-15
7728- The Battle of Borodino: Napoleon in Russia 1812
notable misses: Escape from Colditz Castle, Spoons
1973
1432 - Hare & Tortoise
1752 - Escape from Colditz
2868 - War of 1812
3049 - Tally Ho!
4955 - Conspiracy
5147 - Montage
5480 - Statis Pro Football
5771 - Bowl Bound
6139 - Jockey
6140 - Cartel
notable misses: Perfection, Anti-Monopoly
1974
1446 - Wooden Ships & Iron Men
1475 - The Russian Campaign
1481 - Napoleon: The Waterloo Campaign, 1815
1841 - Rise and Decline of the Third Reich
2173 - Kingmaker
2435 - Panzer Leader: Game of Tactical Warfare on the Western Front
2510 - Crude: The Oil Game
3457 - 1776: The Game of the American Revolutionary War
3463 - Ninety-Nine
4403 - Mahé
notable misses: Hotel Tycoon, Connect Four
1975
2981 - Battle for Germany
3884 - Frederick the Great: The Campaigns of The Soldier King
4106 - Dungeon!
4457 - World War I: 1914-1918
4463 - 221B Baker Street: The Master Detective Game
4483 - Stellar Conquest
4873 - Torbuk: Tank Battles in North Africa 1942
5755 - Cosmic Wimpout
6147 - La Bataille de la Moscowa
6315 - Epaminondas
notable misses: Pay Day
1976
2384 - Panzerguppe Guderian
2889 - Caesar: Epic Battle of Alesia
2952 - Starship Troopers
3218 - War at Sea (Second Edition)
3471 - Terrible Swift Sword: Battle of Gettysburg Game
4090 - Air Force
4127 - Conquistador: The Age of Exploration
4569 - Wellington's Victory: Battle of Waterloo Game - June 18th, 1815
4701 - Submarine
4917 - A Bridge Too Far: Arnhem
1977
665 - Squad Leader
1152 - Cosmic Encounter
1336 - Ogre
1635 - Rummikub
1718 - Victory in the Pacific
1825 - Pente
2088 - Flat Top
2144 - Machiavelli
2585 - Rail Baron
3030 - War of the Ring
notable misses: Pass the Pigs
1978
1294 - Junta
1920 - Cathedral
2558 - G.E.V.
3645 - Wizard
4037 - Source of the Nile
4049 - Fortress Europa
4109 - Battles for the Ardennes
4385 - Strat-O-Matic Hockey
4795 - The Next War: Modern Conflict in Europe
5381 - Napolean at Bay: The Campaign in France, 1814
notable misses: Simon, Hungry Hungry Hippos
1979
324 - Dune
1293 - Magic Realm
1584 - Um Reifenbreite
2087 - Big Boggle
2111 - The Awful Green Things From Outer Space
2126 - Circus Maximus
2241 - Star Fleet Battles
3386 - Divine Right
3536 - Freedom in the Galaxy: The Star Rebellions, 5764 AD
3663 - The Longest Day
notable misses: Guess Who?, Stop Thief, The Campaign for North Africa: The Desert War 1940-43
1980
325 - Civilization
750 - Can't Stop
1108 - Titan
2094 - Ace of Aces: Handy Rotary Series
2793 - War and Peace
3006 - Good & Bad Ghosts
3497 - Empires of the Middle Ages
3586 - Samarkand
4099 - Dragon Pass
4318 - Trax
1981
1354 - A House Divided: War Between the States 1861-65
1456 - Axis & Allies
1563 - B-17: Queen of the Skies
2188 - Storm over Arnhem
2586 - Dark Tower
2621 - Car Wars
3067 - Ace of Aces: Powerhouse Series
3103 - Cry Havoc
3849 - Dragonmaster
4444 - Black Spy
notable misses: Trivial Pursuit
1982
103 - Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective: The Thames Murders & Other Cases
288 - Survive: Escape from Atlantis!
1281 - Empire Builder
1562 - Rommel in the Desert
2093 - Gunslinger
3140 - Illuminati
3160 - Sequence
3168 - Family Business
3433 - Mhing
3820 - Slapshot
notable misses: Phase 10, Upwords
1983
588 - Up Front
920 - Ambush!
1288 - Scotland Yard
1307 - The Civil War 1861-1865
1376 - Empires in Arms
1749 - Take it Easy!
1931 - Wiz-War
1964 - Warhammer: The Mass Combat Fantasy Roleplaying Game (1st Edition)
2292 - Talisman
2424 - Blue Max
notable misses: Jenga, LCR
1984
773 - Wizard
1768 - Balderdash
1959 - Heimlich & Co.
2330 - Vietnam 1965-1975
2684 - The Third World War: Battle for Germany
3066 - British Rails
4053 - Fire in the East
4190 - Conquest of the Empire
4526 - Southern Front: Race for the Turkish Straits
5581 - Metropolis
1985
329 - Advanced Squad Leader
1071 - BattleTech
1337 - World in Flames
1671 - You're Bluffing!
1723 - DungeonQuest
1831 - Code 777
2376 - Pacific War: The Struggles Against Japan 1941-45
2433 - Tales of the Arabian Nights
2747 - Russian Front
3272 - Pax Britannica: The Colonial Era 1880 to the Great War
notable misses: Pictionary
1986
203 - 1830: Railways & Robber Barons
297 - Die Macher
766 - Britannia
914 - Ikusa
1220 - Kremlin
1620 - The aMAZEing Labyrinth
1710 - Werewolf
1839 - Fortress America
2377 - Escape from Atlantis
2430 - RAF
notables misses: Thunder Road, Castle Risk, Fireball Island, Polarity
1987
1195 - Bausack
1663 - Abalone Classic
1869 - Illuminati
2204 - The Fury of Dracula
2349 - Raid on St. Nazaire
2544 - Shark
3223 - Auf Achse
3417 - Black Vienna
3641 - Patton's Best
3693 - 7th Fleet: Modern Naval Combat in the Far East
notable misses: Arkham Horror
1988
1053 - Merchant of Venus
1449 - SET
1755 - Inkognito
2142 - Full Metal Planète
2171 - Blood Bowl (Second Edition)
2252 - Angola
2303 - What the Heck?
2348 - Scattergories
2688 - Clue Master Detective
2506 - Ligretto
notable misses: Girl Talk
1989
584- HeroQuest
597 - Space Hulk
1420 - Ave Caesar
1965 - Taboo
1982 - A la carte
2458 - Turning Point: Stalingrad
2561 - Aliens
2564 - Advanced Heroquest
2784 - Café International
2791 - Escape from the Hidden Castle
notables misses: Electronic Mall Madness, True Colors, Tribond
1990
514 - The Republic of Rome
1302 - Space Crusade
1500 - Eurorails
1564 - Hoity Toity
1624 - HeroQuest Advanced Quest
2001 - Gang of Four
2015 - Daytona 500
2491 - De Bellis Antiquitatis: Quick Play Wargame Rules with Army Lists for Ancient and Medieval Battles
2691 - 1835
2892 - Star Fleet Battles: Captain's Edition Basic Set
notable misses: Halli Galli, Key to the Kingdom
1991
178 - Tichu
820 - History of the World
972 - Quarto
1955 - Cosmic Encounter
1999 - Silverton
2034 - EastFront
2148 - Clue: The Great Museum Caper
2223 - Outpost
2259 - Quo Vadis?
2700 - Master Labyrinth
notable misses: Advanced Civilization, Nightmare, Dark World
1992
222 - Modern Art
948 - Loopin' Louie
1311 - The Rose King
1441 - Breakout: Normandy
1650 - Confusion: Espionage and Deception in the Cold War
1705 - 1870: Railroading across the Trans Mississippi from 1870
2026 - Loot
2650 - Nobody is Perfect
2683 - Billabong
2330 - SPQR
notable misses: Don't Wake Daddy
1993
158 - Magic: The Gathering
1048 - Stick 'Em
1374 - Beyond Balderdash
1642 - We the People
1652 - Lifeboats
1686 - Once Upon a Time: The Storytelling Card Game
2047 - Timbuktu
2338 - Mutant Chronicles: Siege of the Citadel
2497 - Man O' War
2895 - Was sticht?
notable misses: 13 Dead End Drive, Europa Universalis
1994
391 - Blood Bowl (Third Edition)
458 - RoboRally
600 - 6 nimmt!
1183 - Manhattan
1209 - Vampire: The Eternal Struggle
1287 - I'm the Boss!
1377 - Kingdoms
1646 - Wildlife Safari
1777 - Iron Dragon
2328 - Intrigue
notable misses: Catch Phrase!, Talisman (Third Edition)
1995
82 - El Grande
401 - PitchCar
410 - Catan
552 - Medici
560 - High Society
867 - Condottiere
926 - Warhammer Quest
1215 - Necromunda
1239 - 1856: Railroading in Upper Canada from 1856
1246 - Middle-earth
notable misses: Jumanji, The Great Dalmuti
1996
254 - Hannibal: Rome vs. Carthage
860 - Netrunner
985 - Catan Card Game
1014 - GIPF
1303 - Age of Renaissance
1544 - Show Manager
1571 - Serenissima
2233 - Top Race
2316 - Expedition
2395 - Detroit-Cleveland Grand Prix
notable misses: Kill Doctor Lucky
1997
95 - Tigris & Euphrates
302 - For Sale
463 - Bohnanza
946 - Primordial Soup
1005 - Colossal Arena
1199 - Löwenherz
1218 - Turn the Tide
1235 - Quoridor
1412 - Jungle Speed
1530 - Nyet!
notable misses: Chicken Cha Cha Cha, Metro, Mississippi Queen, Fluxx, Twilight Imperium, Fresh Fish
1998
217 - Samurai
512 - Through the Desert
955 - For the People
1042 - Liberté
1081 - Elfenland
1118 - Mystery Rummy: Jack the Ripper
1163 - Kahuna
1208 - Guillotine
1611 - Mamma Mia!
1694 - 1849: The Game of Sicilian Railways
notable misses: Cranium
1999
167 - Paths of Glory
181 - Ra
272 - Tikal
323 - Lost Cities
371 - Chinatown
405 - Schotten Totten
431 - Roads & Boats
536 - Time's Up!
556 - Torres
682 - ZÈRTZ
notable misses: Ricochet Robots, Vinci, The Starfarers of Catan, Bus, Roads & Boats, Apples to Apples, Stephenson's Rocket
2000
183 - Carcassonne
188 - The Princes of Florence
232 - Battle Line
248 - Hive
417 - Citadels
462 - Taj Mahal
663 - Blokus
764 - Web of Power
775 - Dream Factory
802 - La Città
notable misses: Lord of the Rings, Star Wars: The Queen's Gambit
2001
490 - DVONN
717 - San Marco
721 - Genoa
862 - Winner's Circle
862 - Wilderness War
880 - Zendo
1055 - The Werewolves of Miller's Hollow
1070 - Medina
1074 - EVO
1114 - Starship Catan
notable misses: Risk 2210 A.D., Munchkin
2002
29 - Puerto Rico
123 - Age of Steam
471 - Hammer of the Scots
506 - Carcassone: Hunters and Gatherers
547 - Lord of the Rings: The Confrontation
567 - Wallenstein
610 - Mexica
1023 - Keythedral
1187 - Star Wars: Epic Duels
1296 - BANG!
2003
192 - YINSH
387 - Amun-Re
479 - Alhambra
491 - A Game of Thrones
559 - Coloretto
617 - Carcassonne: The Castle
716 - Santiago
774 - Attika
879 - Hey, That's My Fish!
936 - Domaine
notable misses: Ubongo, Fearsome Floors
2004
44 - Power Grid
132 - War of the Ring
145 - Memoir '44
180 - Ticket to Ride
187 - Goa
251 - Antiquity
298 - San Juan
311 - Saint Petersburg
346 - Blood Bowl: Living Rulebook
370 - Heroscape Master Set: Rise of the Valkyrie
notable misses: Ingenious, No Thanks!, Betrayal at House on the Hill, Fairy Tale, Tsuro, Cockroach Poker, Niagara, Saboteur, Dungeon Twister, Friedrich, Cockroach Poker
2005
11 - Twilight Struggle
80 - Caylus
83 - Twilight Imperium: Third Edition
126 - Ticket to Ride: Europe
138 - Railways of the World
209 - Glory to Rome
242 - Indonesia
335 - Arkham Horror
383 - Lord of the Rings: The Confrontation
392 - Descent: Journeys in the Dark
notable misses: Nexus Ops, Wits & Wagers, Antike, Animal Upon Animal
2006
55 - Through the Ages: A Story of Civilization
152 - Commands & Colors: Ancients
163 - Combat Commander: Europe
201 - Shogun
219 - Imperial
285 - Neuroshima Hex! 3.0
290 - Here I Stand
305 - The Pillars of the Earth
317 - Ticket to Ride: Märklin
380 - BattleLore
notable misses: Thurn and Taxis, Taluva, Mr. Jack, Yspahan, Qwirkle, Warrior Knights
2007
19 - Brass: Lancashire
32 - Agricola
65 - Race of the Galaxy
162 - Ticket to Ride: Nordic Countries
198 - Galaxy Trucker
210 - 1960: The Making of the President
228 - Age of Empires III: The Age of Discovery
299 - Notre Dame
308 - In the Year of the Dragon
369 - Kingsburg
notable misses: Colosseum, Chicago Express, Thebes, Jamaica, Container, Tammany Hall, Biblios
2008
52 - Le Havre
85 - Battlestar Galactica: The Board Game
101 - Dominion
104 - Pandemic
118 - Stone Age
149 - Cosmic Encounter
230 - Space Alert
279 - Ghost Stories
282 - Dixit
436 - Time's Up! Title Recall!
notable misses: Axis & Allies Anniversary Edition, Formula D
2009
90 - Dominion: Intrigue
131 - Chaos in the Old World
134 - Hansa Teutonica
137 - Jaipur
186 - Cyclades
197 - Steam
246 - Imperial 2030
264 - Small World
265 - Dungeon Lords
266 - Telestrations
notable misses: The Resistance, Claustrophobia, Tales of the Arabian Nights, Carson City, Tobago, Summoner Wars, Cards Against Humanity, Maria, Ugg-Tect
2010
71 - 7 Wonders
74 - Dominant Species
88 - Troyes
240 - Navegador
241 - Runewars
245 - Alien Frontiers
271 - Sid Meier's Civilization: The Board Game
277 - Merchants & Marauders
330 - Innovation
341 - Fresco
notable misses: Hanabi, Labyrinth: The War on Terror 2001-?, Forbidden Island, High Frontier, Escape from the Aliens in Outer Space, Glen More, Vinhos
2011
15 - The Castles of Burgundy
27 - Mage Knight Board Game
54 - Eclipse
100 - Trajan
133 - The Lord of the Rings: The Card Game
143 - A Game of Thrones: The Board Game (Second Edition)
146 - Ora et Labora
166 - Village
168 - Sekigahara: The Unification of Japan
221 - Dixit: Odyssey
notable misses: Letters from Whitechapel, Takenoko, King of Tokyo, Risk Legacy, Skull, Star Trek: Fleet Captains, Kingdom Builder, Dungeon Petz, Space Empires 4X
2012
13 - War of the Ring: Second Edition
16 - Terra Mystica
42 - Tzolk'in: The Mayan Calendar
59 - Android: Netrunner
60 - Robinson Crusoe: Adventures on the Cursed Island
75 - Lords of Waterdeep
78 - Keyflower
109 - Kemet
115 - Star Wars: X-Wing Miniatures Game
122 - Descent: Journeys in the Dark (Second Edition)
notable misses: The Resistance: Avalon, Targi, Love Letter, Clash of Cultures, Spartacus: A Game of Blood & Treachery, Tokaido, Coup
2013
18 - Concordia
23 - Caverna: The Cave Farmers
87 - Eldritch Horror
94 - Russian Railroads
161 - Nations
196 - Viticulture
208 - Lewis & Clark: The Expedition
211 - Hanamikoji
214 - Bora Bora
231 - Rococo
notable misses: BattleCON: Devastation of Indines, Forbidden Desert, Sushi Go!, Quantum
2014
25 - Orléans
48 - Star Wars: Imperial Assault
64 - Fields of Arle
73 - Five Tribes
93 - Patchwork
99 - Roll for the Galaxy
116 - Legendary Encounters: An Alien Deck Building Game
117 - Alchemists
121 - Star Realms
128 - Istanbul
notable misses: Dead of Winter: A Crossroads Game, Splendor, Xia: Legends of a Drift System, Camel Up
2015
2 - Pandemic Legacy: Season 1
8 - Through the Ages: A New Story of Civilization
17 - 7 Wonders Duel
24 - Viticulture Essential Edition
31 - Food Chain Magnate
33 - Blood Rage
43 - Kingdom Death: Monster
57 - The Gallerist
63 - The Voyages of Marco Polo
84 - Grand Austria Hotel
notable misses: Codenames, Forbidden Stars, Trickerion: Legends of Illusion, Fury of Dracula (Third/Fourth edition), The Grizzled, Baseball Highlights: 2045, Cthulu Wars
2016
4 - Terraforming Mars
9 - Star Wars: Rebellion
10 - Great Western Trail
14 - Scythe
21 - A Feast for Odin
23 - Arkham Horror: The Card Game
34 - Mansions of Madness: Second Edition
47 - Mechs vs. Minions
61 - Aeon's End
72 - Clank!: A Deck-Building Adventure
notable misses: Agricola (Revised Edition), Santorini, Inis, Vinhos Deluxe Edition, Secret Hitler, Lorenzo il Magnifico, Inis, Captain Sonar
2017
1 - Gloomhaven
5 - Twilight Imperium: Fourth Edition
7 - Gaia Project
12 - Spirit Island
35 - Pandemic Legacy: Season 2
37 - The 7th Continent
40 - Too Many Bones
45 - Anachrony
49 - Clans of Caledonia
53 - Azul
notable misses: Lisboa, Ethnos, The Quest for El Dorado, Photosynthesis
2018
3 - Brass: Birmingham
22 - Nemesis
26 - Root
28 - Everdell
41 - Underwater Cities
66 - The Quacks of Quedlinburg
69 - Teotihuacan: City of Gods
81 - Architects of the West Kingdom
86 - Rising Sun
102 - Decrypto
notable misses: Welcome To..., That's Pretty Clever, Keyforge: Call of the Archons
2019
20 - Wingspan
36 - Maracaibo
38 - Marvel Champions: The Card Game
39 - The Crew: The Quest for Planet Nine
46 - Clank! Legacy: Acquisitions Incorporated
50 - Barrage
58 - Pax Pamir: Second Edition
70 - Paladins of the West Kingdom
79 - Tainted Grail: The Fall of Avalon
89 - The Lord of the Rings: Journeys in Middle-Earth
notable misses: Res Arcana, Undaunted: Normandy, Dune, Wavelength, The King's Dilemma
2020
6 - Gloomhaven: Jaws of the Lion
51 - Dune: Imperium
56 - On Mars
67 - Lost Ruins of Arnak
76 - Eclipse: Second Dawn for the Galaxy
165 - Pandemic Legacy: Season 0
200 - Viscounts of the West Kingdom
218 - Calico
262 - Kanban EV
286 - Praga Caput Regni
notable misses: My City, MicroMacro: Crime City, Marvel United, Imperial Struggle
submitted by
robotco to
boardgames [link] [comments]
2021.05.20 17:29 DramaticPatience0 [HIRING] 40 Jobs in IL Hiring Now!
Hey guys, here are some recent job openings in il. Feel free to comment here or send me a private message if you have any questions, I'm at the community's disposal! If you encounter any problems with any of these job openings please let me know that I will modify the table accordingly. Thanks!
submitted by
DramaticPatience0 to
ILJobsForAll [link] [comments]
2021.05.02 18:02 DramaticPatience0 [HIRING] 40 Jobs in KS Hiring Now!
Company Name | Title | City |
Riverside Transport | Hiring Diesel Mechanics | Countryside |
Riverside Transport | Diesel Mechanics - Great Benefits | Edwardsville |
Riverside Transport | Diesel Mechanics - Great Benefits | Fairway |
Roadmaster Drivers School | Local CDL-A Driving Instructors - $52k - $58k/yr - Home Daily | Baldwin City |
Roadmaster Drivers School | CDL-A Driving Instructors / $52K - $58K Yearly / Home Daily | Baldwin City |
Roadmaster Drivers School | CDL-A Driving Instructors / $52K - $58K Yearly / Home Daily | Basehor |
Tri-National, Inc. | OTR Driving with Home Time - Avg $80k/Year | Cherokee |
Hill Brothers Transportation | Hill Brothers Transportation: Cdl-A Company Truck Driver Jobs | City Of Spring Hill |
Cook Portable Warehouses | CDL A Regional Truck Drivers - Home Weekends - Great Benefits | Parsons |
Hill Brothers Transportation | Hill Brothers Transportation: Cdl-A Company Truck Driver Jobs | Township Of Clinton |
Hill Brothers Transportation | Hill Brothers Transportation: Cdl-A Company Truck Driver Jobs | Township Of Palmyra |
Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma | Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma: Cook 2 Guy Fieri'S American Kitchen & Bar (Caney) | Caney |
Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma | Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma: Security (Caney) | Caney |
Clean Harbors | Clean Harbors: Cdl A Owner Operators / Avg. $215k After Fuel | City Of Caney |
Clean Harbors | Clean Harbors: Cdl A Owner Operators / Avg. $215k After Fuel | City Of Hays |
Crete Carrier Corporation | Crete Carrier Corporation: Cdl-A Driver - Walmart Dedicated, Home Weekly Top 50% Average $80, 580 (Shawnee) | City Of Kansas City |
Crete Carrier Corporation | Crete Carrier Corporation: Cdl-A Driver - Walmart Dedicated, Home Weekly Top 50% Average $85, 587 (Basehor) | City Of Kansas City |
MT Select | MT Select: Cdl-A Lease Purchase Owner Operators | City Of Kansas City |
Stanley Steemer | Stanley Steemer: Carpet Cleaning Technician (Shawnee) | City Of Kansas City |
Crete Carrier Corporation | Crete Carrier Corporation: Cdl-A Driver - Walmart Dedicated, Home Weekly Top 50% Average $85, 587 (Leavenworth) | City Of Lansing |
Stanley Steemer | Stanley Steemer Cleaning Technician (Olathe) | City Of Lenexa |
Wilson Logistics | Wilson Logistics: Power Only - Seeking Cdl-A Owner Operators - Earn 75% Of Linehaul Owner Operators | City Of Lenexa |
Clean Harbors | Clean Harbors: Cdl A Owner Operators / Avg. $215k After Fuel | City Of Mulberry |
Encompass Health | Registered Nurse- Encompass Health | City Of Prairie Village |
Messer North America INC. | CDL A Tank Driver | Garfield |
Messer North America INC. | CDL A Tank Driver | Liebenthal |
MT Select | MT Select: Cdl-A Lease Purchase Owner Operators | Lincoln |
Messer North America INC. | CDL A Tank Driver | Mccracken |
Carrier One | Carrier One: Flatbed Driver / Cdl A / Lease Purchase | Ten Mile |
Carrier One | Carrier One: Flatbed Driver / Cdl A / Lease Purchase | Township 6 |
Carrier One | Carrier One: Flatbed Driver / Cdl A / Lease Purchase | Township Of Arion |
MT Select | MT Select: Cdl-A Lease Purchase Owner Operators | Township Of Banner |
Wilson Logistics | Wilson Logistics: Power Only - Seeking Cdl-A Owner Operators - Earn 75% Of Linehaul Owner Operators | Township Of Bryant |
Wilson Logistics | Wilson Logistics: Power Only - Seeking Cdl-A Owner Operators - Earn 75% Of Linehaul Owner Operators | Township Of Cambria |
Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma | Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma: Banquets Cook 2 (Caney) | Township Of Caney |
Student Transportation of America | Student Transportation of America: Part-Time Cdl-B School Bus Driver - Paid Cdl-B Training - Corvallis, Or (Falls City) | Township Of Hamlin |
Premier Transportation | Premier Transportation: Cdl-A Drivers / Earn $70k First Year - University Park, Il | Township Of Iowa |
Premier Transportation | Premier Transportation: Cdl-A Drivers / Earn $70k First Year - University Park, Il | Township Of Lincoln |
Premier Transportation | Premier Transportation: Cdl-A Drivers / Earn $70k First Year - University Park, Il | Township Of Logan |
Truck Pro | Truck Pro: Diesel Mechanic -Greenville, Sc | Township Of Mission |
Hey guys, here are some recent job openings in ks. Feel free to comment here or send me a private message if you have any questions, I'm at the community's disposal! If you encounter any problems with any of these job openings please let me know that I will modify the table accordingly. Thanks!
submitted by
DramaticPatience0 to
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2021.04.21 13:57 babcockfinanci Babcock & Associates
| https://preview.redd.it/xkmnys65niu61.png?width=163&format=png&auto=webp&s=e3080915511b8ad28495997d2350b898e29db4ff Local Independent Insurance Agents Serving Edwardsville IL 62025 and Glen Carbon IL 62034. Rely on Babcock and Associates for you insurance needs. We also offer financial services, investments and more. Auto/Home Insurance, Commercial Insurance, Workers Compensation, Umbrella Policies, Professional Liability, Rental Property, Home, Auto, Farm, Boat, Camper, 4 Wheeler, Life/Health Insurance, Life/Health Insurance. 401k Financial Services, Financial Services, Retirement Plans, Tax Plans, 401(k) Planning, 403(b) Planning, College Plans, Estate Plans, Individual and Business Tax Returns, Tax Forecasting and Projections, Litigation Support, Business Start-up and Valuation https://www.babcockfinancialgroup.com/ Our Social Pages: https://www.facebook.com/BABCOCKFINANCIALGROUP https://twitter.com/babcockfinancia https://www.linkedin.com/company/babcockfinancialgroup/about/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuoSnAzABqI6sy_lK6LiWFQ/about https://www.pinterest.com/babcockfinancialgroup/ submitted by babcockfinanci to u/babcockfinanci [link] [comments] |
2021.04.12 17:52 DramaticPatience0 [HIRING] 40 Jobs in IL Hiring Now!
Hey guys, here are some recent job openings in il. Feel free to comment here or send me a private message if you have any questions, I'm at the community's disposal! If you encounter any problems with any of these job openings please let me know that I will modify the table accordingly. Thanks!
submitted by
DramaticPatience0 to
ILJobsForAll [link] [comments]