The Assembly bill’s February passage came in response to the Kimberly-Clark announcement in January that it plans to shutter factories in Neenah and Fox Crossing as part of a global restructuring. The move had been expected to cause the loss of 600 jobs in the Fox Cities.

Fitzgerald later said he still expects the company to close the Neenah plant, which employs about 110 people, but that an incentive package could save the plant in Fox Crossing, which has about 500 jobs.

It was the latter facility about which the company said Tuesday it won’t make any decisions until after the extraordinary session.

The bill that passed the Assembly in February would give Kimberly-Clark a deal modeled on one given last year to electronics maker Foxconn Technology Group to locate near Racine.

It would allow Kimberly-Clark to claim tax credits for 17 percent of eligible payroll costs in exchange for retaining jobs in Wisconsin. The package could cost between $100 million and $117 million over 15 years, according to the state’s economic development agency, Wisconsin Economic Development Corp.