Sports stadium financing should be flagged
Our president is about 30 years too late.
In his latest budget proposal, President Obama will call on Congress to put an end to tax-exempt funds to finance sports stadiums. This would have been really bad news for most of the zillionaire sports owners around the country who have benefited from what might be the biggest and worst political scandal in America over the last 35 years.
Hey Mr. President, the horses just escaped. Would you mind closing the barn door?
According to Bloomberg News story in 2012, when the New York Giants were about to open the season against the Dallas Cowboys in their new stadium, there were 21 owners whose teams were playing in new or renovated stadiums built in the last 25 years with tax-free public borrowing.
The story let Giants fans know that they had already helped Jerry Jones pay for his $1.2-billion, 80,000-seat stadium in Arlington, Texas. How? Well, every American taxpayer is forced to pay for new stadiums that are subsidized by tax-free borrowing.
According to Bloomberg, tax exemptions on interest paid by municipal bonds for stadiums costs the U.S. Treasury $146 million a year. By the time all the publicly financed stadiums are paid for, taxpayers will have paid $4 billion.
And, of course, Obama, when he was an Illinois state senator, was more than happy to vote in favor of the $587-million renovation of Soldier Field in Chicago in 2000.
That was one of the all-time worst examples of government theft of taxpayer dollars to subsidize a billion-dollar sports team.
Here’s what University of Chicago sports economist Allen Sanderson said at the time: “If we started out to build the ugliest stadium in the country for the most money with the fewest alternative uses in the worst possible location, we’re pretty much there.”
The future president was part of one the worst taxpayer ripoffs in history. In November of 2000, while 99 percent of media attention was focused on Bush, Gore and the hanging chads in Florida, the Illinois legislature rammed the Soldier Field proposal through.
No referendum.
No public hearings.
One poll of 1,200 registered voters showed 66 percent opposed the plan.
During a presidential debate in 2007, Obama defended his support of the Soldier Field debacle by saying that it led to economic development in Chicago.
That’s pretty amazing that a guy who is so quick to quote the consensus of scientists on climate change, can ignore the consensus of economists who believe that sports facilities and major events almost never lead to economic development.
Meanwhile, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel is trying to talk the NFL into bringing the Super Bowl to his city and he wants to add 5,000 more seats to Soldier Field to reach the NFL’s required 65,000 capacity.
Who will pay for them? Who cares?
Meanwhile, Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who is emerging as a strong candidate for the Republican nomination for president and who sells himself as a strong fiscal conservative, recently came out in support of a new building for the Milwaukee Bucks.
In their thank you statement to the governor, the Bucks promised “an economic catalyst for the entire state.”
George Will and Charles Krauthammer, two of the country’s most prominent conservative commentators, also are two of the countries biggest baseball fans. Both spend lots of time at Washington Nationals games in their beautiful, new government-financed, voter-opposed ballpark.
I did a lot of Googling and couldn’t find a column by either one that questioned the funding or called the Nationals beneficiaries of corporate welfare.
Meanwhile, back in Illinois, the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, by a vote of 4-3, made 30-year old Lou Bertuca its $160,000-per year executive director. The four yes votes came from Gov. Pat Quinn appointees. Beruca, who has no experience with sports facilities, was Quinn’s campaign manager.
It never ends.
• Let’s meet in, say, 2019 to discuss which college football programs had the best recruiting year.
• Syracuse won’t be playing postseason basketball next month. Not because of a mediocre record, but because the university is punishing itself for, among other things, some interesting “internships” served by former players at the local YMCA. Graduation rates for NCAA basketball players have been going up, especially for black players.
Is this better schooling or better cheating? I’d put my money on bogus courses. Graduation rates have always been overrated. The question should be how they’re graduating and/or what courses they’re taking.
• How many hot-shot high school football recruits, who held press conferences to announce where they were going to pursue their education, were asked about their majors? I’d be willing to bet not one.
• Why is Sidney Crosby drawing about one-fifth the number of penalties he usually draws?
• In 1980, I snuck onto the field during Super Bowl XIV and covered a kick for the Steelers. If you don’t believe me, ask Brian Williams. He was with me.
John Steigerwald writes a Sunday sports column for the Observer-Reporter.