Miami-Dade County

With plans to hire 3,400, Miami tech firm secures $4.6 million county subsidy pledge

Miami-Dade County would pay about $4.6 million to an unnamed tech company planning to add more than 3,000 six-figure jobs in Miami. The company would receive the incentive subsidy once the hiring is completed over the next several years.
Miami-Dade County would pay about $4.6 million to an unnamed tech company planning to add more than 3,000 six-figure jobs in Miami. The company would receive the incentive subsidy once the hiring is completed over the next several years. Miami

An unnamed Miami software company plans to announce a major expansion soon, with plans for 3,400 well-paying jobs securing the company a $4.6 million pledge from Miami-Dade County this week.

The tax-funded subsidy only gets paid out if the company, code-named “Project Xray,” follows through on its planned hiring spree.

The new jobs would expand an existing Miami headquarters with about 800 workers into one with more than 4,000, according to county documents tied to the subsidy request. The average compensation for the positions is $107,000 a year, according to the application.

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An executive with the county’s economic-development agency, the Beacon Council, called it the largest deal ever closed in Miami-Dade’s growing tech sector.

“This is the largest tech job creation project that county has ever supported,” said James Kohnstamm, an executive vice president at the Beacon Council, a nonprofit that receives county dollars to recruit and retain large companies.

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On Tuesday, Miami-Dade commissioners approved the $4.6 million incentive pledge, which would amount to less than $1,500 per new position. The county agreement requires the creating of 3,400 jobs by the application, with the $4.6 million paid out annually through 2028 if the terms are met.

The subsidy application said the hiring is expected over the next three years as the company expands its existing office space. Kohnstamm said the company plans to announce its expansion as early as this week.

“The project represents exactly the type of company that we’re trying to grow in our community,” he said.

This story was originally published February 21, 2023 at 5:04 PM.

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Douglas Hanks
Miami Herald
Doug Hanks covers Miami-Dade government for the Herald. He’s worked at the paper for more than 20 years, covering real estate, tourism and the economy before joining the Metro desk in 2014. Support my work with a digital subscription
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