Quinn: Caterpillar decision about port access

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CHAMPAIGN (AP) — Gov. Pat Quinn said Thursday that he believes Caterpillar Inc.'s decision to bypass Illinois as it looks to build a new plant and relocate some of its Japanese operations was based almost entirely on Illinois' lack of ocean access and had little to do with the state's business climate.

The Peoria-based manufacturer said this week that it decided against the almost one-dozen Illinois locations vying for the plant and its 1,400 jobs because of logistical shortcomings and its longstanding, widely publicizes concerns about doing business in the state.

Quinn, during a stop at the University of Illinois in Champaign, said he spoke with Caterpillar CEO Doug Oberhelman before this week's decision and was told the plant needed easy access to a deep-sea port.

"I personally spoke with Doug Olberhelman about that," Quinn told reporters. "He told me at the time that logistics would drive that (decision). ... He also pointed out that they needed a deep-sea port."

Caterpillar spokesman Jim Dugan on Thursday declined comment on the company's decision, only saying that Oberhelman had "recently communicated with the administration" about the decision.

But in an email to leaders in cities and counties in Illinois that hoped to lure the plant, Caterpillar said its concerns were both logistical and governmental.

"Please understand that even if your community had the right logistics for this project, Caterpillar's previously documented concerns about the business climate and overall fiscal health of the state of Illinois still would have made it unpractical for us to select your community for this project," said the email, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press.

The mayor of Galesburg, one of the Illinois communities that sent Caterpillar a proposal, said the company's logistical requirements weren't specified as the town put together its bid. Mayor Salvador Garza said that, based on other projects, Galesburg looked at its bid as, if nothing else, a chance to put the town on the radar for future development by Caterpillar and other companies.

"We clearly understood that the bid form Galesburg and west-central Illinois was a longshot, but we took it," he said.

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