Speaking
of wealthy, powerful men, the elite group who own sports teams have
been on a winning streak. They managed to convince New Yorkers,
Marylanders and Tennesseans to turn over billions of dollars in public
money to help build glitzy new stadiums (for the Bills, Orioles/Ravens
and Titans), setting new subsidy records as they went.
As
I write, lobbyists with other pro sports teams – the Chicago Bears,
Washington Commanders and the Oakland Athletics among them – are
explaining why their stadiums should be paid for with tax dollars,
touting all the jobs, all the tourism, all the new tax revenue the
projects will allegedly bring.
The facts will not be on their side.
“We
[sports economists] all agree that the ideal amount of public funding
is either zero or awfully close to zero,” Victor Matheson, a sports
economist and professor at the College of the Holy Cross in
Massachusetts, told the Nevada Independent in a June 4 story
about the A’s. “These are typically just gigantic giveaways to
billionaire owners at the expense of taxpayers. It’s the sort of thing
we generally wouldn’t do for other types of entertainment venues, other
types of retail venues.”
And
last month in Tempe, Arizona, voters were also not on the side of a
wealthy pro sports owner seeking taxpayer dollars for a new National
Hockey League area. They soundly rejected a ballot initiative that would
paved the way for the new subsidized arena.
The
Coyotes are owned by a billionaire named Alex Meruelo, who approached
leaders in Tempe after the City of Glendale nixed his team’s lease after
the 2021-2022 season for frequently being late on rental payments and
sometimes failing to pay what they owed. The City of Tempe agreed to
help pay for the area as part of a larger (stop me if you’ve heard this
before) “entertainment district” that would eventually be build out to
include retail, restaurants, a music venue and luxury housing.
Supporters called it a “win-win,” claiming no tax money would be at risk.
The Grand Canyon Institute, a non-partisan think tank, did its own
analysis. I talked to Dave Wells, the research director at the Grand
Canyon Institute, about their findings.
Here's our conversation.
The
Tempe vote was good. Shy of ending subsidies for professional sports
venues altogether, voters should always have the opportunity to decide
they're the best uses of their money.
Hope
you're listening, Nevada, which in recent weeks has been considering a
request from A's billionaire owner John Fisher (who inherited his wealth
from his parents, who co-founded Gap, Inc.) for $380 billion from the
public.
Follow the latest on this deal, at Field of Schemes.
Quote of the week:
“You’ve
all called us in here for a special session and are asking, minimally,
for the state to give you all $36 million per year for the next five
years for a taxpayer-funded stadium at the same time that the governor
has vetoed funding for summer school, a bill to support children’s
mental health, a bill requiring paid family leave, all because the
governor said we couldn’t afford them,” Democratic State Sen. Rochelle
Nguyen asked team representatives during a special session on June 7.
“Can you explain to me why we need to provide hundreds of millions of
dollars for a billionaire’s team to come to the Las Vegas Strip, on some
of the most valuable property in the world, if we can’t provide funding
for critical resources for summer school and health care?”
Until next time.
Arlene
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