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Honeywell CEO: Bay State
isn’t business-friendly

Boston Herald, by Ira Kantor

Original Article

Posted By:JoniTx, 2/6/2013 4:06:03 PM

The CEO of Honeywell International blasted the business climate in Massachusetts during a speech to Greater Boston corporate leaders today. “I have not found (Massachusetts) to be a business-friendly state,” said David M. Cote, a New Hampshire native and head of the New Jersey-based Fortune 100 firm. “At the end of the day, I’ve had some horrible experiences in Massachusetts so far.” Cote, who serves on the bipartisan National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform and was named co-chair of the U.S.-India CEO Forum by President Obama, said he was reluctant to expand or even do business

  

Post Reply  

Reply 1 - Posted by: Father of Internet, 2/6/2013 4:14:37 PM     (No. 9162316)

The Globe and other liberal outlets will find a way to insulate Deval Patrick and try to lay it all at the feet of Mitt Romney...


Reply 2 - Posted by: NorthernDog, 2/6/2013 4:16:05 PM     (No. 9162322)

Put your money where your mouth is. Start shifting work to business-friendly states that would appreciate all those jobs.


   

 

  


 
Reply 3 - Posted by: TXknitter, 2/6/2013 4:18:50 PM     (No. 9162329)

You know, CEO´s should stop the threats. One thing, ONE THING that will answer the way businesses are treated in MA. Pull up stakes and move. Mr. Cote, don´t waste your breath giving speeches. Publicly praise states like Texas and thn ACT - pull up stakes and move.


Reply 4 - Posted by: schnapps, 2/6/2013 4:19:44 PM     (No. 9162335)

#2. He already has. Honeywell International is very... well, international.


Reply 5 - Posted by: rburns, 2/6/2013 4:44:02 PM     (No. 9162374)

Welcome to South Carolina!!


Reply 6 - Posted by: Susannah, 2/6/2013 4:46:34 PM     (No. 9162378)

Honeywell, Hewlett-Packard, and a hundred other firms want immediate access to M.I.T., Babson, the medical school/hospital complex in Boston, Olin, Harvard Business School, and a bunch of other facilities located in Mass. They´ll hang on here for the prospect of Scott Brown being elected governor in 2014, which WILL create a super-friendly business climate.


Reply 7 - Posted by: lazlototh, 2/6/2013 5:06:18 PM     (No. 9162412)

I work for a gigantic technology corporation. What happens is that there is some lower limit of people in a place like Massachusetts that HAVE to be there to do existing work, but the company doesn´t add to them, and adds employees where it can get a better return. As the old saying goes, money goes where it is treated best. Massachusetts doesn´t treat money well. But nobody keeps any more high-cost/low-return employees than they absolutely have to, and Massachusetts does all it can to make sure that employees are high-cost and it´s hard to get a commensurately high return because of the high cost.


   

 

  


 
Reply 8 - Posted by: nimby, 2/6/2013 5:15:59 PM     (No. 9162427)

And this is also the moron who said he wouldn´t mind paying more taxes during the fiscal cliff debate!! Great for him since he got a bonus of 30 million!! The jerk keeps sending jobs outside of the USA! Lets not forget that he accompanied Obummer on his trips to Asia to gin up business and did nothing in the US.


Reply 9 - Posted by: kofcfn, 2/6/2013 5:29:29 PM     (No. 9162439)

MA bad for business? I guess he has never been to California.


Reply 10 - Posted by: john56, 2/6/2013 7:52:00 PM     (No. 9162604)

Come to Texas (as long as you leave your liberal ideas back in Mass., Calif., Ill. and anywhere liberals are in charge, otherwise stay home, sucker).


Reply 11 - Posted by: RIsailor, 2/6/2013 9:16:06 PM     (No. 9162679)

Honeywell provided electronic devices used in Big Dig and sold stuff to Quincy. CEO is complaining about doing business WITH MA, not IN MA.


Reply 12 - Posted by: rbruce20, 2/6/2013 11:58:56 PM     (No. 9162838)

Come to Tampa Bay. We already have a Honeywell complex. It can be expanded.


   

 



 

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