Monsanto Corp. bought 155 acres in the Avra Valley northwest of Tucson last week, solidifying its efforts to build a greenhouse there to grow corn and soybeans for research.
The St. Louis-based company paid $3.74 million Wednesday to a company owned by the Kai farming family of Marana for the land, county records show.
The acreage of the purchase raises questions about what if any operations or projects Monsanto plans for the site besides the seven-acre greenhouse. The timing raises questions about why the company bought the site before a proposed tax incentive deal with Pima County is brought to the Board of Supervisors for approval.
A Monsanto spokeswoman didnβt return a phone call or an email seeking comment on the purchase. Pima County Administrator Chuck Huckelberry said in an email that he hasnβt heard anything from Monsanto about the purchase, so he canβt answer questions about it.
The purchase came nearly two months after Monsanto said it plans to build a greenhouse on seven acres in the Tucson area. The company has said it will hire 40 to 60 employees and its representatives have said it will invest $100 million.
It came a few days after the Star reported that Pima County and Monsanto are negotiating a possible incentive deal that would reduce the companyβs property tax burden on the site by two-thirds. That proposal probably will go to the Board of Supervisors in November or December, Huckelberry has said. The company has said it plans to start construction on the greenhouse by the end of 2016.
The incentive being considered would expand the countyβs foreign trade zone to include the Monsanto site. Inclusion in the zone reduces import duties and would offer Monsanto other benefits besides property tax abatements.
Monsantoβs proposal is opposed by two of the five county supervisors. They are Democrat Richard ElΓas, an outspoken liberal and environmental advocate, and Republican Ally Miller, a fierce critic, in general, of Huckelberryβs economic development efforts involving incentives.
Monsanto is popular among many farmers who say its seed research and other operations have increased crop production and crop resistance to herbicides. Itβs unpopular with other farmers who believe it has too much power, particularly after its recent takeover by Bayer, another seed giant and pharmaceutical manufacturer. The company is also opposed by some environmentalists who donβt like its use of genetically modified seed crops and its production of the Roundup weedkiller, although Monsanto has said it doesnβt intend to plant many, if any, GMO crops in the Avra Valley greenhouse.
Republican Supervisor Ray Carroll, another outspoken environmentalist, said heβs still neutral on the proposal, adding heβs been sympathetic to most county economic development efforts. Supervisors Sharon Bronson and Ramon Valadez, who are Democrats, havenβt commented on it yet.
On Friday, Carroll said the large land purchase shows that βmaybe Monsanto has ideas for other uses. Theyβre buying a lot more than they need for a greenhouse. I can only assume theyβre doing it to make sure they have plenty of room to expand into any other ancillary outgrowth of the arid land greenhouse operation.β
As for the purchaseβs timing, Carroll said the company seems to be βputting the cart before the horse.β
βThese people have shown their hand, theyβre making a gung-ho move here. Usually, they wait, to see how your foreign trade zone went down and your tax incentives are approved,β he said.
At the same time, Carroll said heβs supported several recent job-creation incentive packages including those for WorldView and Caterpillar. He made it a point to say that Monsanto hasnβt announced plans for any activities here that have been controversial elsewhere, such as GMOs.
Miller took Huckelberry and the Monsanto incentive package to task on Facebook last week.
βJust read the Monsanto article in the paper,β Miller posted on Tuesday. βWell now, another back room deal being negotiated?? People are outraged? It is about time.
βThese deals need to be thoroughly researched and vetted. Letβs see how many days notice we get on this deal before it is served up for a rubber stamp! Disgusting that I am hearing about this in the media as a county administrator does the deal in the dark of night. Disgusting! Pima County taxpayers deserve better!β Miller said.
A Huckelberry spokesman has said that in general, the county administrator believes disclosing details of negotiations can hurt economic development efforts.