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Community Coalition Demands BlueOval City Benefits, Calls on Ford to Negotiate • Tennessee Lookout
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Community Coalition Demands BlueOval City Benefits, Calls on Ford to Negotiate • Tennessee Lookout

A coalition of community members from the towns surrounding the new BlueOval City Manufacturing Campus in West Tennessee released a list of demands for a legally binding agreement on community benefits this month, inviting Ford to negotiate.

Their demands include the company’s commitment to hiring local workers at decent wages, creating funds to support locals as rents and costs of living rise, monitoring the campus’s environmental impacts, and give the new “BlueOval Good Neighbors Community Board” the power to supervise and enforce these provisions.

The list — which is based on community feedback collected by BlueOval Good Neighbors and the advocacy group Tennessee for All during their own community outreach over the past two years — has not yet been recognized by Ford.

The company conducted a separate two-year outreach effort to gather feedback on a “Good Neighbor Plan” that has not yet been released. This effort is overseen by an Equitable Growth Advisory Council comprised of 25 community leaders and elected officials selected by Ford.

The 6-square-mile campus will be built on approximately 3,300 acres of what was once farmland in the southwest corner of Haywood County. The $5.6 billion campus will include electric vehicle and battery manufacturing facilities, a supplier fleet, a rail connection and a wastewater treatment plant.

This massive enterprise – one of the largest battery and vehicle manufacturing campuses in the country – is just 2.5 miles south of Stanton, a small town of fewer than 600 people. Mason, a majority black town of just over 1,300 residents, is about 6 miles west of the facility.

“We want residents in every neighboring BlueOval City community to benefit from campus life and look forward to introducing the Good Neighbor Plan soon,” spokesperson Jessica Enoch wrote in an email to Tennessee Lookout. “Ford has been contacted by numerous groups who say they speak on behalf of residents, many of whom are not even from the area. It would not be possible for us to engage with all third party groups claiming to speak on behalf of residents. In fact, what residents tell us most is that they want to speak for themselves.

Community members, leaders and union representatives gathered at a Nov. 16 meeting hosted by BlueOval Good Neighbors and Tennessee for All said they want to have a voice in their future, supported by legal strengthening of a community benefits agreement.

They agree that development brings opportunities, but the growing challenges are already palpable. Meeting attendees described neighbors who lost their rental homes when owners sold their property after Ford came to town. One woman described seeing trees cut down and smelling smoke as fallen logs were burned. Some have seen rents and property taxes rise as property values ​​rise. Many have received offers to buy their homes.

“You get these little things in the mail when people want to buy your house, and they have enough courage to offer me $35,000,” Mason Alderwoman Virginia Rivers said. “Where am I going to buy a house for (this). If I sell what I have, I can’t even buy anything else.

Vice Mayor Virginia Rivers, Mason, Tennessee (Photo: John Partipilo)
Virginia Rivers, alderman of Mason, Tennessee. (Photo: John Partipilo)

Participants also expressed ongoing concerns about threats to water quality, not only from the campus, but also secondary developments that lead to water pollution and runoff.

Several people highlighted what the community has experienced since 2022: the attempted state takeover from Mason City Charter, Fayette County Government closure of a mason community center And Black farmers receive seemingly low offers for land to be used for national road projects leading to the new campus.

Enoch said the Equitable Growth Advisory Council will use community feedback to shape its plan, including research and surveys conducted by the University of Tennessee at Martin and input from four public meetings held in February, at which participated representatives of Tennessee for All.

“The council is just one way Ford engages with residents. Ford and Ford Philanthropy have spent more than 1,000 hours listening to community feedback and learning about local priorities, and we continue to welcome ideas from residents, who are encouraged to contact (email protected)“, she wrote.

Rebekah Gorbea, statewide coordinator for Tennessee for All, said BlueOval Good Neighbors’ list of demands is the culmination of the coalition’s work. She said the group had tried to meet Ford negotiate for two years.

“These requests are the product of years of community input on the harsh realities of Ford’s BlueOval City project,” Gorbea said in a press release. “These electric vehicle factories are sprouting up all over the South and the Biden administration and Ford have an opportunity to show that these developments are as much about people as they are about profit. If Ford truly wants to be a good neighbor, we are willing to negotiate. »

Summary of the main demands of BlueOval Good Neighbors