ENROLLED 2019 Regular Session HOUSE RESOLUTION NO. 207 BY REPRESENTATIVE GLOVER A RESOLUTION To memorialize the United States Congress to take such actions as are necessary to investigate the current condition of economic development in the state of Louisiana concerning the Revitalizing Auto Communities Environmental Response Trust's (hereinafter "RACER Trust") fulfillment of fiduciary duties regarding the former General Motors Shreveport plant (hereinafter "GM-Shreveport plant") and its operations. WHEREAS, in 2008, the United States' domestic automotive industry was on the verge of collapse; and WHEREAS, in recognition of the impending collapse, groups of interested parties, including impacted communities, coalesced around common goals geared toward preventing the collapse of and preserving General Motors, the most important component of United States-based automobile manufacturing; and WHEREAS, these groups were adamant and vocal and took the lead in calling for federal intervention to prevent the collapse of the industry; and WHEREAS, these groups also advocated for assistance and protection for the local communities that would ultimately be impacted by the seismic shifts taking place within the domestic automotive industry; and WHEREAS, amongst these advocacy groups was the Mayors and Municipalities Automotive Coalition based in Washington, D.C., and comprised of local officials in automotive communities around the country; and WHEREAS, continued advocacy specifically resulted in a forty-nine billion dollar assistance package from the federal government to the benefit of General Motors; and WHEREAS, the General Motors bankruptcy resulted in eighty-nine former General Motors properties being entrusted to the RACER Trust for the sole purpose of using and Page 1 of 6 HR NO. 207 ENROLLED leveraging those assets to replace the jobs lost in communities where General Motors plants were closed and shuttered; and WHEREAS, from the forty-nine billion dollar assistance package, more than six hundred million dollars was set aside to fulfill the mission of the RACER Trust; and WHEREAS, approved uses for RACER Trust funds for administrative expenses, as stated in Article 1, Section 1.1.1 of the trust agreement are, "including but not limited to property taxes, liability insurance, security, personnel costs, utilities, maintenance, professional fees, property marketing costs..."; and WHEREAS, all expenses associated with the former GM-Shreveport plant were paid by the new post bankruptcy General Motors until December 31, 2012; and WHEREAS, despite having access to resources that would have covered all carrying expenses and allowed for an unrushed and deliberate due diligence process, the RACER Trust, at the direction of its Redevelopment Manager, Mr. Bruce Rasher, announced in the first week of January 2013, less than one week after the official exit of General Motors from the state-of-the-art GM-Shreveport plant, that the facility would be optioned to and ultimately controlled by Mr. Paul Elio and Elio Motors; and WHEREAS, during February 2013, the RACER Trust and Elio Motors entered into a purchase and sale agreement whereby Elio Motors was expected to acquire from the RACER Trust all of the property, both movable and immovable, relative to the former GM-Shreveport plant; however, Elio Motors purchased only the movable property and as such, entered into a security agreement with the RACER Trust in the amount of twenty-three million dollars to acquire the movable property; and WHEREAS, circumstances changed regarding the sale of all of the former GM-Shreveport plant to Elio Motors; instead, the immovable property of the plant was purchased by the Caddo Parish Industrial Development Board; and WHEREAS, at the request of the Caddo Parish Industrial Development Board, a parent company known as Industrial Realty Group first purchased the immovable property of the former GM-Shreveport plant and immediately resold this same property to the Caddo Parish Industrial Development Board; and WHEREAS, the Caddo Parish Industrial Development Board then leased the immovable property back to Industrial Realty Group; and Page 2 of 6 HR NO. 207 ENROLLED WHEREAS, as the lessee and property manager of the former GM-Shreveport plant, Industrial Realty Group next subleased a portion of the plant to Elio Motors; and WHEREAS, Elio Motors assumed the plant as a sublessee during the latter part of 2013 and was expected to manufacture automobiles, stimulate economic growth, and create approximately one thousand five hundred jobs by the end of 2015; and WHEREAS, since 2013, Elio Motors has not engaged in automobile manufacturing at the former GM-Shreveport plant, and as a result, related economic development and stimulated growth in this state have not materialized as projected and desired; and WHEREAS, at the time that Mr. Rasher extended the option for Mr. Elio to purchase the GM-Shreveport plant and its assets, Mr. Elio was in substantial debt with a failing engineering firm, was subject to substantial tax liens, and was in active search of employment; and WHEREAS, Mr. Stuart Lichter, CEO of Industrial Realty Group, who ultimately gained control of the former GM-Shreveport plant, described and outlined the plant's worth at an Elio Motors press conference on January 13, 2013; and WHEREAS, Mr. Lichter said the GM-Shreveport plant "was probably the most modern car plant in America", and further stated, "It's fully equipped and the amount of money it saves in start-up costs, I can't even calculate, but it's something like five hundred million dollars of equipment sitting in this plant, and you just turn it on!"; and WHEREAS, in fact, less than a decade earlier, General Motors doubled the size of the GM-Shreveport plant and invested almost two billion dollars in the process; and WHEREAS, despite the substantial manufacturing potential of the GM-Shreveport plant and all of the previous failures of Mr. Elio, Mr. Rasher and the RACER Trust first gave Mr. Elio an exclusive option to buy the plant and all of its equipment; and WHEREAS, despite the acknowledged manufacturing potential of the plant, Mr. Rasher spoke to the members of the Caddo Parish Commission almost exclusively about the salvage value of the GM-Shreveport plant, as opposed to its utilization for continued manufacturing; and WHEREAS, the parish administrator and former president of the Caddo Parish Commission both publicly stated that Mr. Rasher's statement to them essentially provided two options: Page 3 of 6 HR NO. 207 ENROLLED (1) Cooperate with the Industrial Realty Group's and Elio Motors' occupancy and use of the plant. (2) Complete demolition of the plant. WHEREAS, the option and threat of demolition was likely unwarranted based on the stated value and potential of the plant; and WHEREAS, the conduct of Mr. Rasher and other staff of the RACER Trust denied the people of Caddo Parish and the state of Louisiana the opportunity for a reasonable and appropriate due diligence process for determining how the former GM-Shreveport plant would be used to replace the jobs lost by the plant's closure; and WHEREAS, an industrial development board, created by the Louisiana Legislature, was used to facilitate the current status of the plant; and WHEREAS, certain aspects of the current lease agreement in place between the Caddo Parish Industrial Development Board and the Industrial Realty Group could potentially violate Article VII, Section 14(A) of the Constitution of Louisiana; and WHEREAS, such provisions potentially in violation of the constitution may have become effective as recently as November 2018; and WHEREAS, Article VII, Section 14(A) of the Constitution of Louisiana describes prohibited uses with respect to donations, loans, or pledges of public credit and provides in pertinent part: "Except as otherwise provided by this constitution, the funds, credit, property, or things of value of the state or of any political subdivision shall not be loaned, pledged, or donated to or for any person, association, or corporation, public or private."; and WHEREAS, it is a matter of state interest and concern that the prospect of the former GM-Shreveport plant's demise may have actually been a false threat used as a catalyst to urge the Caddo Parish Commission and other local and state economic development officials to support and commit the former GM-Shreveport plant into the contractual care of Industrial Realty Group and Elio Motors; and WHEREAS, this matter of state interest and concern warrants further investigation into the provisions of this state's industrial development board statutes provided in Chapters 7 and 8 of Title 51 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes of 1950 and Article VII, Section 14(A) of the Constitution of Louisiana to determine the following: Page 4 of 6 HR NO. 207 ENROLLED (1) The purpose and intended use of industrial development boards incorporated by municipalities and parishes in the state of Louisiana. (2) Whether powers thereof or the manners of use of such boards have potential to create an unintended consequence of use of public property and resources contrary to the best interests of the citizens of Louisiana. (3) How the Caddo Parish Industrial Development Board may have been used to create a contract contrary to the best use of the GM-Shreveport plant. (4) Whether certain provisions of the current lease agreement for the GM-Shreveport plant may result in a prohibited use of state property as described in Article VII, Section 14(A) of the Constitution of Louisiana. WHEREAS, in light of the dire circumstances surrounding the former GM-Shreveport plant, the state is compelled to examine the process of negotiations which resulted in Industrial Realty Group's and Elio Motors' attainment of the former GM-Shreveport plant, per the recommendation of the RACER Trust; and WHEREAS, contingent upon the findings of the subcommittee, the Legislature of Louisiana and the Department of Economic Development may be equipped with indispensable, essential information for the creation of improved policy to better regulate and safeguard with respect to negotiations expected to further the state's policy of protecting the welfare and future prosperity of its citizens; and WHEREAS, it is appropriate that the subcommittee examine any potential breach of fiduciary duties or obligations which may have resulted in this state's lost opportunities for substantial economic development; and WHEREAS, the assets of the former GM-Shreveport plant possess great potential to be a source of real opportunity for economic growth and job creation in Louisiana, but although publicly owned, no provisions or mechanisms for local oversight are in place to rectify this agreement made in furtherance of the state's economic development that has not materialized to provide an economic benefit to this state; and WHEREAS, House Rule 14.51 pertinently states the following: "Each standing committee...each joint committee...and any subcommittee of such standing or joint committee is hereby specifically and expressly granted the power and authority to hold hearings, subpoena witnesses, administer oaths, require the production of books and records, Page 5 of 6 HR NO. 207 ENROLLED and to do all other things necessary to accomplish the purposes of the study or investigation assigned to it by the House or by the legislature or by a majority of the members of the committee". THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the House of Representatives of the Legislature of Louisiana does hereby memorialize the United States Congress to take such actions as are necessary to investigate the current condition of economic development in the state of Louisiana relative to the RACER Trust's fulfillment of fiduciary duties concerning the former GM-Shreveport plant and its operations. BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this Resolution be transmitted to the presiding officers of the Senate and the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United States of America and to each member of the Louisiana congressional delegation. SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Page 6 of 6