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Logistics and Distribution

Supply Chain Central

hen companies are looking to right-shore operations, manage costs and bring balance to a tangled global supply chain, there’s no more central place than Kansas. But companies have known that for far longer than the most recent crunch.

Over the past three years, Site Selection magazine’s Conway Projects Database has tracked more than 40 new investments in logistics facilities in the Sunfl ower State. How important is the industry? Among other indicators, logistics and distribution employees in Kansas have been considered essential workers as federal CARES Act funding was distributed.

The sector is also essential to the state’s record-breaking economic development success, as Governor Laura Kelly announced in December 2021 that her administration had closed 312 private-sector economic development projects representing more than $3.69 billion in investments and more than 12,000 jobs.

WThe logistics projects on that list help keep global commerce afl oat. Walmart’s $200 million, 300-job fulfi llment center is ramping up at Kanza Fire Commerce Park in Topeka. The company picked the site in 2019, two years after by ADAM BRUNS its corporate PR staff blogged about Topeka in showcasing the retail giant’s support of U.S. manufacturing at the Mars Wrigley plant in the state capital. The project was supported by $150 million in industrial revenue bonds approved by Shawnee County commissioners. The facility is one of four Walmart DCs in the state (the others are in Ottawa, Edgerton and Kansas City, Kansas). Its 1.8-million-sq.-ft. footprint makes it the largest in the state. That’s even larger than the three facilities Amazon announced in 2020 in Park City, Wichita and Kansas City, Kansas (the e-commerce giant’s second facility in that municipality). Since 2010, Amazon has created more than 4,500 jobs in Kansas and invested more than $2.9 billion across the state, including infrastructure and compensation to employees.

Company

Urban Outfi tters, Inc. Amazon.com, Inc.

County City Inv. (US$M) Jobs Site Area (Ksq.ft.)

Wyandotte Kansas City 350 2,000 880

Sedgwick Park City 75 700 1,000

Amazon.com, Inc.

Wyandotte Kansas City Orizon Aerostructures, LLC Johnson Olathe

75 500 127.3 400 1,000 175

Walmart Inc. Amazon.com, Inc. Shawnee Topeka Johnson Shawnee 200 300 30 200 1,800 170

Accelerate360 LLC Johnson Olathe 31 160 455

Hostess Brands, Inc. Harte-Hanks Inc. Beyond Warehousing Medline Amazon.com, Inc. Turn 5, Inc. Johnson Edgerton Wyandotte Kansas City Johnson Edgerton

2.3 150 NA 125 11.9 110 Wyandotte Bonner Springs 77.5 100 Sedgwick Wichita 30 100

Johnson Lenexa 13 100

Overstock.com, Inc.

Wyandotte Kansas City American Construction Metals Johnson Shawnee NA 100 NA 100 NA 297 270 NA 140 350 NA 120

Source: Conway Projects Database

BONNER SPRINGS BEELINE FOR MEDLINE

Global companies with regional growth requirements are also fi nding Kansas solutions — or outgrowing the sites they located in the area years ago.

Beyond Warehousing, a 3PL subsidiary of NorthPoint Development located at Logistics Park Kansas City in Edgerton less than one mile from the BNSF intermodal facility, says one of its earliest customers is saving more than $175,000 annually on total supply chain costs thanks to taking advantage of the building’s location in its new transportation and warehousing plan.

In October 2021, Illinois-based medical supply manufacturer and distributor Medline announced a $77.5 million, 100-job investment in a new distribution center in Bonner Springs, where the company is also bringing 141 team members as it moves from a smaller facility in Kansas City, Missouri. The Kansas City Areas Development Council reports that 5.9% of the KC region’s workforce — some 63,983 workers — are employed in the transportation and warehouse industry, higher than the 4.7% employed in the sector nationally.

The Medline expansion at Commerce

70 Business Park (along I-70) is part of the company’s Healthcare Resiliency Initiative to increase supply-chain effi ciencies and reliability, and speed delivery to customers at an essential time for those services to health-care providers. But the prescient HRI program was in place before the pandemic struck. During its fi rst three years of (2018 to 2020), Medline invested $1.5 billion in new distribution centers, manufacturing capabilities, and IT upgrades, creating 8,500 new jobs at eight new distribution centers. “Our state-of-the-art, medical-grade distribution center will allow us to deliver critical healthcare supplies to the entire continuum of healthcare, quicker, more effi ciently, and to 7,000 Logistics Related Comapanies a broader territory, while creating quality new jobs and opportunity in Wyandotte County,” said Medline President of Global Operations

Bill Abington. The company employs more than 27,000 worldwide, with a fl eet of more than 1,200 trucks and business in more than 125 countries. “Kansas is the perfect place to put down roots that reach the world, and we’re so excited to see Medline ready to do just that while putting more Kansans to work,” Lieutenant

Governor and Commerce Secretary David

Toland said.

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