Tag Archives: R.T. Rybak
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Killing it softly: Republicans and the Vikings stadium

Legislative Republicans, including State Senator Julianne Ortman, rolled out their latest strategy to kill the new proposed Minnesota Vikings stadium today.  What’s that, you say?  A new funding proposal can’t possibly be a strategy to kill the bill?  Not true at all.  The flurry of proposals you’ve seen Republicans lately are actually designed to kill the stadium deal while giving a reasonable out for stadium opponents to say that they supported some kind of package for a new stadium.  Because while many legislators don’t want to vote for a stadium, they also don’t want to get tagged with the blame if (when) the team leaves town.

What’s the primary piece of evidence supporting the hypothesis that today’s proposal is just political cover?  None of the other critical parties in the stadium discussion — the team, Governor Mark Dayton, Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak, or even the Republican sponsors of the current proposed stadium legislation — were involved in the crafting of the new proposal.  The Vikings, Dayton, and Rybak all find the new proposal unacceptable, while legislative sponsors State Sen. Julie Rosen and State Rep. Morrie Lanning were lukewarm at best.

The press conference where the outlines of this new proposal were sketched out was not confidence-inspiring, either.  At time, the legislators contradicted themselves, and to say the details of what could or could not be counted as “infrastructure” as part of the deal were fuzzy would be an understatement.  Team officials have been working for a decade to get a new stadium, and it’s only now — one day after legislative leaders State Sen. David Senjem and State Rep. Kurt Zellers said the session would be adjourned — that the “silver bullet” legislation comes out of the woodwork?

Zellers, in particular, continues to be a profile in political timidity on the stadium issue. After saying that he would let the legislative process play out and demanding that DFLers deliver one-half of the required votes — 34 votes — in the House, he’s gone back on his word.  The bill moved through House committees as Zellers demanded, and Minority Leader State Rep. Paul Thissen indicated he had the required 34 votes in his caucus for the bill, meaning that Zellers only needed to provide 34 of his party’s 72 members to get the bill passed.  Yet, he won’t move the bill to the floor.

Today’s proposal just continues the string of such dog-and-pony acts perpetuated during the committee process, from the insertion of the racino proposal at one point in the Senate Finance Committee, to attempt to change the funding mechanism to user taxes or mandating a referendum in the city of Minneapolis.

It’s time to put an end to the cover-yer-butt politics pervading the Capitol today.  There’s a stadium bill that has made it through committee.  It has earned a floor vote, and it’s time for our legislators to put their vote where their mouth is. Vote Yes.  Vote No.  But just vote already.

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Shaky foundation for new Vikings stadium?

Friday afternoon, the text of the bill detailing the proposal for the new Minnesota Vikings stadium was released.  The bill fits the outlines of the deal announced by Governor Mark Dayton, Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak and Vikings owner Zygi Wilf on March 1.

Construction costs of the new facility, which would be built just to the east of the Metrodome, total $975 million dollars.  The Vikings and other private sources would put up $427 million, the state would contribute $398 million, and the city of Minneapolis would chip in the remaining $150 million.

Minneapolis’s contribution would be paid for by redirecting the revenue from existing taxes in place to support the Minneapolis Convention Center (a 0.5% sales tax, downtown restaurant and liquor taxes, and a lodging tax).  The Vikings share would include stadium naming rights as well as expected assistance from the National Football League.

The state’s portion is where things get tricky.  Gov. Dayton has promised “no general fund dollars” will go to the stadium (more on this below).  The entire $398 million is projected to be paid for by appropriation bonds backed by revenues from electronic charitable gaming, primarily electronic pulltabs and bingo.  In order to support the $398 million principle and interest over the next 30 years, the state would need to make annual payments of about $40 million.

Last year, charitable gaming (which is 90% paper pulltabs, with the rest split among bingo, paddlewheels, tipboards and raffles) generated about $38 million in revenue for the state.  The state Revenue Department projects that the electronic gaming will generate about $62 million per year, leaving a $22 million cushion.  No problems, right?

Maybe not.  Critics have pointed out several potential problems that may need to be addressed.

Problem #1:  No state currently uses electronic pulltabs to the extent being proposed here in Minnesota, so there’s no history anywhere to pull from.  Idaho and Florida have limited use of such games, which limits the ability to extrapolate from their results.  Virginia is planning to rollout electronic pulltabs and bingo later this year, but that too will be on a more limited basis than what is proposed here.

Problem #2:  Existing forms of charitable gambling are in the midst of a serious decade-long drop in revenues.  In fact, gross revenues have dropped 31% over that time and tax revenue to the state has dropped 34%.

Source: Minnesota Gaming Control Board

Problem #3:  charitable gaming advocates say Revenue Department projections are widely out of line.  Because of the issue in Problem #1, some feel that the assumptions used by the Revenue Department are not accurate.  For instance, here’s an example cited by King Wilson, Executive Director of Allied Charities of Minnesota, in MinnPost:

Take Apple Valley American Legion Post 1776. It has only one site, its clubhouse, and previous legislative proposals have limited each site to a maximum of 12 pull-tab and bingo machines.  Revenue from pull-tabs has been estimated to produce $225 a day, bingo $90.

“If you multiply each of those by 12 machines and 365 days a year, you get $1.4 million,” says Wilson. The Department of Revenue, however, says that Apple Valley’s revenues will rise by nearly $6 million.

Not to mention that the estimates rely on increased availability of the electronic games.  Currently available in about 2,700 locations across the state, revenue estimates indicate that the electronic games may be available in up to 4,000 locations.  But some say that may not be the case because of the increased up-front cost of the machines.

Charities currently pay about 1.2 cents per paper pulltab in expenses, but they would be on the hook for leasing costs of $100-125 per month per machine with the electronic systems (the equivalent of about 10,000 paper pulltabs).  Increased costs for charities may translate into lower payouts for gamblers.  Lower payouts for gamblers translates into fewer gamblers, which lowers revenues — starting a vicious cycle that makes gaming unprofitable for the charity and reduces tax revenues available to the state to pay for the new stadium.

So where does all of this leave us?

The whole process has been distasteful, to say the least.  And, owners of professional sports franchises are not the most sympathetic group of characters in the world.  Certainly, one can fairly argue that as a state, we shouldn’t even be in the business of building stadiums and we should thank the Vikings for the memories and let them move along to their next destination.

Personally, I don’t fall into that camp.  I believe that professional sports are part of the fabric of life in a metropolitan area like the Twin Cities and that these facilities are part of the infrastructure of an area with over 3 million people.  It’s important to structure the deal in a way that protects the public investment and doesn’t unduly subsidize wealthy team owners.  We’ve done this before with Xcel Energy Center and Target Field.  We can do it again here.

Let’s take a step back for a moment to Gov. Dayton’s claim that the stadium isn’t paid for by general fund dollars.  Well, that’s just not true.  Today, all charitable gaming revenue flows into the state’s general fund, and nothing changes under this bill.  The appropriation bonds issued by the state are different than general obligation bonds, in that appropriation bonds are not mandated to be paid out of the general fund should gaming revenue not be sufficient.  The state can elect whether or not to appropriate money to pay the bondholders every year.  However, the consequences of default for the state (even on an appropriation bond) are so severe that it effectively means that the state’s portion of the stadium is being backed by general fund dollars.

Well, if that’s the case then I think the Legislature has some work to do here to firm up the revenue source that backs the state’s investment in such a facility.  At the very least, the bill should contain a fallback measure that is triggered if gaming revenue falls short of the level required to cover the state’s contribution — my thought would be a ticket tax levied on events in the new stadium until the shortfall is recovered.  Perhaps even better would be a broader expansion of gambling to racinos at Canterbury Park and Running Aces or a Block E casino.

This state can’t afford to have critical investments in education, health care, public safety and transportation jeopardized by uncertainty about electronic pulltab revenues.  The Legislature needs to provide additional certainty around how the state portion of the stadium’s construction tab will be paid before voting to approve it.

Let’s hope that our legislative delegation steps up to the plate and makes constructive changes to the bill.  Rep. Joe Hoppe is the chair of the Commerce Committee in the House, which will almost certainly hold hearings on the bill.  Hoppe has also spent time as part of the legislative working group on this issue, so he should be well-positioned to steer this bill in the right direction.

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Feeling a little Surly? [UPDATED]

After its successful drive last legislative session to get approval to build a “destination brewery”, the Surly Brewing Company is moving forward on identifying potential sites for the building.  According to the Star Tribune, one of the cities stepping forward as a suitor is Chaska.

Don’t get your hopes up yet, as Surly’s current home — Brooklyn Center — is expected to make a strong pitch to keep the brewery.  Meanwhile, Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak was one of Surly’s biggest cheerleaders during the legislative session and city staff have already reviewed 20 potential sites with Surly officials.  But if nothing else, it’s good for Chaska to be in on the conversation and it demonstrates the city’s aggressiveness is pursuing new, unique opportunities for economic development.

[UPDATE]:  The Chaska Herald reports the city is pitching the Chaska Building Center site to Surly officials, so far to no response.


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