Lawmakers are struggling to save California’s  last remaining car factory, NUMMI plant, in Fremont. The plant is operated  by both GM and Toyota, and employs over 5,000 Californians. Legislators  are hoping to push through a bill that will give the plant increased  tax breaks, and a decision is expected this afternoon. Check out the  following article from the LA  Times discussing the issue.
 
"We believe that plant is a public  good," said state Sen. Roderick Wright (D-Inglewood), who co-wrote  the Senate bill. He added that his own Los Angeles County district is  home to parts suppliers that would be affected should NUMMI close. "The  fact that we could lose our last car manufacturing facility is unconscionable."
 
But amid Sacramento's grinding budget  crisis, there is considerable doubt about how much money would be available  to provide tax cuts to one of the world's largest companies -- and whether  any amount of taxpayer-funded goodies would be sufficient considering  the depths of the auto industry's woes.
"How many extra millions do taxpayers  have to give Toyota to stay?" said Lenny Goldberg, executive director  of the California Tax Reform Assn., who questions whether those kinds  of incentives even work. "If you're going to give it away, give  it away right."
Manufacturers have long complained about  the cost of doing business in California. The legislation proposed this  week would, in part, reduce that burden for the auto industry, sponsors  said.
The bills, ABX4 31 and SB 830, would  exempt NUMMI and other auto plants from sales tax on improvements and  retooling of the plant, a process that can cost hundreds of millions  of dollars. Toyota is not currently retooling NUMMI, but it could in  the future to build fuel-efficient vehicles such as hybrids.
 
The Senate bill goes further. It would  designate the plant and the area around it an enterprise zone, which  provides a variety of other tax benefits. In addition, the bill would  cut state fees that NUMMI pays for utilities, and it would encourage  state and local agencies to buy vehicles made at the plant.