JACKSON, MINN. – Amid the cornfields and winding river of tiny Jackson, Minn., hides a boomtown flush with housing tax credits, cheap land, interest-free loans for builders and robots. Yes, robots.
It all started a year ago when Georgia-based AGCO relocated its North American tractor line from France to its plant in Jackson. Since then, it has added a second shift, opened a mammoth visitors center and increased employment from 850 to 1,400.
With U.S. agriculture still soaring, AGCO is expanding again. This time it's adding a $42 million wing to its facility and 75 more workers to build its custom tractors. But such rapid growth has created a problem for this southwest Minnesota town: Jackson's jobless rate stands at 3.7 percent and the population hasn't budged in 13 years, making it tough to staff the factory and find housing for those who want to work there.
"It is a deterrent," said Mayor Wayne Walter. "AGCO loses good people because they can't find workers nearby. I think people would move here, if we had the housing." Some AGCO workers travel as far as 80 miles to get to the plant, sometimes from areas also scrambling for talent such as Windom, where Toro has a plant, or Spirit Lake, Iowa, where Polaris has expanded several times.
Jackson is dangling incentives to get skilled residents and builders to the town. The city is selling large residential lots at half-price, offering builders interest-free loans and seeking federal grants to fund apartment construction.
It's a plan, but "it's not a sure thing in a small area," Walter said.
Part of it is the past recession. "We need a builder to take the risk of not making a profit until they sell," he said.
AGCO officials aren't waiting.