State Auditor Stacey Pickering issued the following statement.
Former Viking Range Corporation Repays over $2.5 Million to State of Mississippi
after Failure to Comply with MDA Loan Terms
In July 2005, MDA completed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the former Viking Range Corporation to grant $3 Million to the corporation from the Mississippi Major Economic Impact Act (MMEIA) to assist in constructing a dishwasher manufacturing facility. Initially, Viking agreed to create and maintain 250 new jobs for five years in addition to the approximately 1,150 employees at the time the MOU was signed; MDA did not provide documentation verifying actual employment numbers. Viking also agreed to make a $10 Million capital investment into the facility before May 1, 2008.
In an audit, OSA determined that Viking supplied a capital investment of over $15 Million; however, Viking was unable to create the additional 250 jobs required by the original MOU. After defaulting on the job creation mandate, Viking paid a $312,000 penalty to the State of Mississippi in January 2009.
Amendments to the MOU were drafted in April 2009 and February 2012; these amendments extended the job creation date to May 1 of 2011 and 2015, respectively. When Viking failed to meet the job requirement agreement in 2011, the company paid a $396,000 Million penalty to the State of Mississippi in quarterly installments and amended the MOU as previously stated.
Viking Range Corporation was purchased by Middleby Corporation in December 2012. The project was defaulted in 2015, and no amendment was made to the MOU. Middleby Corporation paid a default penalty of $600,000 in December 2015. After being sent a letter of default by MDA in June 2017, Middleby Corporation has paid $1.2 Million, which represents two $600,000 payments for failure to maintain the MOU requirements in 2016 and 2017. According to the MOU, Middleby is still subject to annual penalties until May 2020.
In 2015, the Mississippi Legislature approved a $5 Million bond issuance to Middleby Corporation under the ACE Fund. This funding was issued after Middleby Corporation purchased Viking Range Corporation. A 2016 change in state statute forced the grant to be issued through the Mississippi Industry Incentive Finance Revolving Fund (MIIRF); this change lowered to capital investment obligation of Middleby from $20 Million to $5 Million. Currently, Middleby Corporation has received $2.3 Million through the MIIRF.
In July 2017, MDA issued a letter of default to Middleby related to the funding through the MIIRF for failure to maintain the MOU related to that funding source. Middleby paid the default penalty of $13,300.17 in August 2017.
OSA recommends MDA verify current employment numbers at the signing of all MOU agreements. Additionally, regarding Viking/Middleby Corporation, OSA strongly recommends MDA closely monitor the situation to ensure Middleby is adhering to its MOU to minimize or eliminate future defaults.
12 comments:
396,000 million is a lot of samolians.
Freaking shell game. And they're good at it too.
Can anybody in state government count to 396,000 million?
Now we know why the state auditor had to contract out under the limits under the old reporting methods for public relations.
Lot of recommendations for MDA to follow. Good luck with that
Still small potatoes......Pickering won't go after the whale of Education. BILLIONS being squandered. FACT.
Agree 8:29..can't wait to enter 396,000 billion into my spreadsheet. Its a lot for sure.
I believe the vacuum cleaner manufacturer who left the coast following Katrina (relocated his plant to Tennessee) left the state holding the bag on a similar 'contract'. Never paid back a dime.
Don't see how this is a 'shell game', 7:26. Maybe you can explain your theory.
Not a penny will be repaid
143, do you have a reading comprehension problem? The story (although not KF headline) states clearly that the $2.5 million HAS ALREADY BEEN REPAID. Nice try, but it's folks like you that prove we should do more with the third grade reading gate - maybe require it for everyone who wants to express a political observation.
Meanwhile, Hyde-Smith continues to pose with the Confederate battle flag and Guest thinks that prosecuting a man who accosted the woman in the commercial qualifies him to represent me in congress. And since we all love basketball, there's the guy whose roundball experience is supposed to earn him a ticket to D.C. Nothing but emotion-based hype from all of these people. No substance.
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