[DML] DeLoreans almost manufactured in Puerto Rico
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[DML] DeLoreans almost manufactured in Puerto Rico
- From: Todd Masinelli <tmasin@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 20:28:04 -0500
A friend of mine in Puerto Rico sent me two articles from the San Juan
STAR, dated August 27, 2007. Of course they had the Associated Press
"entrepreneur from Texas is going to blah blah blah" article that's
popping up everywhere lately, but they also had another one that talked
about Puerto Rico almost serving as the location of the DeLorean
factory. I have included the text of the article below. Nothing too
mind-blowing in there, but I thought someone might find it interesting.
I find it funny that their "files" indicate only one DeLorean was driven
in Puerto Rico. When I was in San Juan last year, I just missed meeting
up with Luis, a DeLorean owner who lives there with VIN 5342. He was in
the process of tracking down every DeLorean in PR, and at that point he
had accounted for 17 of them!
Anyway, enjoy.
Todd
VIN 6681
------------------------------
DeLorean Almost Came to P.R.
by The STAR Staff
DeLorean lore is of particular interest in Puerto Rico, where the
car came within an inch of being produced in Aguadilla in 1978.
Financing was lined up, deals were all but sealed on a $96 million,
550,000-square-foot plant at the former Ramey Air Force Base in
Aguadilla, then called Punta Borinquen. The Puerto Rico Industrial
Development Company's $50,000-a-year lease included the plant and 185
acres of land, established as a foreign trade zone so the company could
bring in French-made motors without duty.
Pridco even planned to put up $3 million in worker training to
prepare some 2,000 islanders to build 30,000 of the sports cars a year.
The car was to cost around $14,000, a pretty penny 23 years ago.
Fomento Administrators had rounded up some $60 million in seed
money, $40 million of it in federally guaranteed loans. At the last
minute, DeLorean pulled the plug, moving the operation to Ireland, which
wooed him away with some $127 million.
At first, the loss was the subject of great controversy and much blame.
The decision to drop Puerto Rico was a blight on the island's image
-- and psyche. Here was DeLorean, the flashy maverick of the auto
industry, planning to build a stainless steel, Italian-designed sports
car in Puerto Rico. The free world had its eye on this deal. It spoke
volumes for the island's manufacturing prowess.
Speculation was rampant as to why the island lost the deal. Delays
in the negotiating process were blamed. The Puerto Rico Manufacturers
Association was quick to accuse the new Incentives Law that would allow
only a 90 percent tax deduction, not 100 percent. Others thought the
government should have thrown more cash into the deal.
But then-Fomento Administrator Manuel Dubon drew the line at giving
DeLorean more than 70 percent of the cost of the project. "We simply
did not have those resources," Dubon said after the deal failed. "And
if we did, we would have been foolish to risk so much in this venture."
In a column published in The STAR in August of that year, Hector
Reichard from the Chamber of Commerce of Aguadilla wrote of the
frustration and anger when the deal went sour. But he also pointed out
the positive side.
"We have learned a good lesson. If we want to do it, we can. Never
before...have so many [people]...worked so hard and pledged so much
money to develop one single project."
Reichard also pointed out then that the studies developed for that
project made it clear that the development of the former Aguadilla air
base for cargo, passengers and industry should be the basis for economic
development of that region.
As luck would have it, the factory in Ireland was plagued with
problems. The first car came off the line in 1980 and by 1982, the
company was in serious trouble. It was in receivership by the end of
February and DeLorean was soon nabbed attempting a multi-million dollar
cocaine transaction.
According to STAR files, there was one DeLorean driven in Puerto
Rico, and that belonged to Olympic Mills President Francisco Carvajal,
who bought it in Miami for $35,000.
"If the car had been manufactured in Puerto Rico, as we hoped it
would, I firmly believe it would have been a success," Carvajal told The
STAR in 1983. "It came out much more expensive due to shipping costs,
the duty tax and the two-year delay in changing locations."
------------------------------
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