The Amazon warehouse at the former Cerro Wire site in...

The Amazon warehouse at the former Cerro Wire site in Syosset is nearing completion. Credit: Howard Schnapp

The prospect of Nassau County gaining hundreds of new jobs tied to the opening of an Amazon warehouse in Syosset is now in doubt.

That is because the retailer will close one of its warehouses in Bethpage and transfer hundreds of workers from that facility to others, including the Syosset location. A company official confirmed the Bethpage closure on Thursday in response to questions from Newsday.

The county’s Industrial Development Agency last year granted Amazon and the developer of the Syosset warehouse about $11 million in tax breaks over 15 years in return for pledging to create 150 warehouse jobs in Syosset. The positions were to be in addition to those at two Amazon facilities in Bethpage and one in Carle Place, the application for IDA assistance states.

Beside the Amazon personnel, each warehouse is home to small transportation companies that employ dozens of van drivers to deliver packages the "last mile” to the customer’s doorstep.

Amazon spokeswoman Alisa Carroll said on Thursday: "We regularly look at how we can improve the experience for our employees, partners, drivers and customers, and that includes upgrading our facilities. As part of that effort, we have made the decision to close our Bethpage facility and are offering all employees the opportunity to transfer to other Amazon facilities nearby that offer upgraded amenities, including increased on-site parking and larger operational spaces,” she said. 

Amazon has told employees, vendors and government officials that it will leave the 161,360-square-foot warehouse at 201 Grumman Rd. W. in Bethpage for the new 204,000-square-foot warehouse in Syosset, sources with direct knowledge of the retailer's plan told Newsday over the past week.

Two Amazon warehouse workers, who requested anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak on the matter, said they were told by managers to prepare to leave Bethpage by September for the Syosset warehouse.

The workers said they were assured that they could remain on the Amazon payroll — just not in Bethpage.

Including Amazon employees and workers at the small transportation companies, more than 500 people work out of the 201 Grumman Rd. W. facility, the sources told Newsday. Two years ago, Amazon said it had 472 employees at the Bethpage warehouse, with 190 holding full-time positions and 282 working part time, according to the IDA aid application.

An Amazon spokeswoman on Thursday didn't immediately respond to questions about the number of people who now work at the Bethpage facility and how many would staff the Syosset facility.

Steel Equities, Amazon’s landlord in Bethpage, declined to comment through its real estate attorney. The future of a second Amazon warehouse in Bethpage, at 80 Grumman Rd. W., also owned by Steel Equities, isn’t known.

The 80 Grumman Rd. W. building is used by Amazon Fresh, the company's chain of grocery stores, and for the delivery of large-sized merchandise. Seventy-five people worked there in 2020, according to the IDA application.

Amazon’s decision not to renew the lease on 201 Grumman Rd. W. comes as the retailer adjusts to smaller increases in online shopping after two years of rapid growth during the pandemic’s height.

Amazon has confirmed that it is subleasing warehouse space nationwide that it had planned to use. “Subleasing is something many established corporations do to help manage their real estate portfolio,” Carroll, the company spokeswoman, said last month, referring to Amazon's national strategy.

The retailer began renting 201 Grumman Rd. W. in 2016 after Steel Equities purchased the building as part of a $6.8 million project. The project was awarded tax breaks in 2015 by the Nassau IDA, according to state records.

The building had been a Goya Foods Inc. warehouse for 17 years and before that was the site of a runway used by aircraft manufacturer Grumman Corp.

Amazon has benefited from lower rent because the landlord has passed along a portion of the IDA property-tax savings, which totaled $1.1 million in 2019-20, the state records show.

Similarly, the owner of the Syosset warehouse, Syosset Park Development LLC, is expected to pass along some of its IDA property-tax savings in the form of lower rent to Amazon. At least $8 million of the $11 million in incentives is property-tax savings over 15 years, according to an estimate by the Syosset Central School District. 

The school district opposed IDA aid for the $72 million project, which is now nearing completion on the site of the former Cerro Wire factory, north of the LIE. 

Syosset Park Development and Amazon said in their IDA application that the new warehouse would not “result in the removal or abandonment of a plant or facility of the applicant … or relocation of any employee of the applicant” located within Nassau.

IDA chairman Richard Kessel said Wednesday, “Amazon recently contacted the IDA and we are having discussions with them on both their old and new facilities.” 

Besides Bethpage, Carle Place and Syosset, Amazon has plans for at least two last-mile warehouses in Melville and one each in Holbrook, Shirley-East Yaphank, Westhampton Beach and Woodmere.

A planned Hauppauge warehouse is in doubt after the developer sold the property to a rival. In Freeport, village officials have said they want to sell a school athletic field so that Amazon may build a warehouse, but school officials have sued to block the sale.

MAKING DELIVERIES ON LI

Amazon is expected to have at least nine "last-mile" warehouses in Nassau and Suffolk counties.

Open or planned

Bethpage (two facilities)

Carle Place

Holbrook

Melville (two facilities)

Shirley-East Yaphank

Syosset

Westhampton Beach

Woodmere

Closing

Bethpage (One of the two facilities in the hamlet is slated to close in September)

SOURCES: IDA applications, Newsday research

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