Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Company snags $10M in tax credits

- By Kevin Smith kvsmith@scng.com

Dr. Squatch, a Southern California-based maker of natural soaps, deodorant and other personal-care products, has secured $10 million in tax credits.

The company gained the tax breaks through Subcity, an online platform that identifies and secures tax credits and incentives for small and medium-sized businesses.

Tom Ramhorst, Dr. Squatch’s chief operating officer, said his business will receive the California credits through the state’s GoBiz program over the next five years and will use the savings to expand its operations.

The company employs 300 workers, with an office in Marina del Rey and another 35,000-square-foot facility in Rancho Dominguez that includes 30,000 square feet of production space and a 5,000-square-foot office area.

The tax credits will allow

Dr. Squatch, a Southern California-based maker of natural soaps, deodorant and other personal-care products, plans to expand operations.

the business to open another 110,000-square-foot manufactur­ing plant in Brea that will employ 150 to 200 additional workers over the next year.

Ramhorst said Subcity’s onestop-shop model took the headache out of wading through all of the tax incentives that are available, many of which businesses don’t even know exist.

“Subcity made it simple,” Ramhorst said. “We’ve gone through hypergrowt­h over the past three

years, and we needed another manufactur­ing facility. These tax credits helped us make the decision to stay in California.”

Hundreds of California-based businesses fed up with the state’s ever-increasing regulation­s and environmen­tal mandates have exited the state over the past decade. Last year the exodus reached an accelerate­d rate, according to a report by the Hoover Institutio­n at Stanford University.

The August 2021 study said the Golden State lost 75 corporate headquarte­rs in the first six months of last year. That was up from 62 lost during the same period of 2020. Texas gained 114 of the 265 California companies that relocated their headquarte­rs between January 2018 to June 2021.

Subcity was founded in August by CEO Alex White and co-founders Gil Gonzales and Chris Clark. The company has placed a heavy focus on helping California manufactur­ers obtain tax credits at both the state and federal level.

White started a company called Next Big Sound, which was later sold to Pandora. He assumed senior roles with both Pandora and SirusXM when that company merged with Pandora.

Gonzales is an expert in economic developmen­t and incentives and has served as a senior appointee to California Gov. Jerry Brown and as an adviser to Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti. Clark spent nine years working for Google.

“I tell folks that this is a business model I wish we didn’t have to found,” Gonzales said. “The tax programs can be really confusing and bureaucrat­ic. There are dozens of investment programs over dozens of websites, and small businesses don’t have entire teams or consultant­s they can use to apply for these programs.”

Subcity charges a 10% “success” fee for most of the tax breaks it secures for businesses, but there’s no charge for the more complex programs that an average company would have difficulty wading through.

“We plan to move to a subscripti­on model,” Gonzales said. “To date, we’ve helped close to 12 companies get tax breaks of anywhere from $2,000 to the $10 million, which is an outlier. Most [California] tax credits for manufactur­ing businesses average $25,000 to $40,000.”

The Hoover Institutio­n report said the out-migration of California companies has a ripple effect on the state’s economy.

“When company headquarte­rs migrate out of California, significan­t economic costs affect not only the state but also communitie­s as well-compensate­d employees depart and no longer patronize local businesses or pay taxes,” the report said. “Moreover, when advanced technology companies move their headquarte­rs, centers of innovation move with it.”

 ?? COURTESY OF DR. SQUATCH ??
COURTESY OF DR. SQUATCH

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