Phew! Finally figured out a way to get rid of those giant surpluses every level of government is running, I see. Thank god they didn't spend it on stupid crap like city services.
So the city thinks that 200 million is a worthwhile investment because it will eventually pay itself off with more taxes and fees coming in? Maybe a few years from now if the economy improves, but certainly not now.
$200 million is a little further from 'no public money' than I expected. For that, they'd better get a decent team like the Florida Panthers to move up.
What @1 through @5 said. Glad we're not wasting this money on stupid stuff like roads, schools, housing, public health so that billionaires can reap the profits.
@1, conveniently enough that debt is scheduled for retirement this year. And our "investment" will pay for itself over time and benefit the entire region. Exactly as disproved by the study rob! likes to cite. Or, if you prefer, exactly as the mayor said the tunnel won't.
@15 Yeah, if this goes through its the 3rd best arena deal in the NBA and the best stadium deal for Seattle in decades. I don't get the blind resistance; the details of this seem unprecedentedly good for the city, if you listen to them.
@16, usury (loan interest) is against Sharia law. Islamic banks have devised various schemes to get around this prohibition, usually through profit-sharing or something like that.
A) secure the teams
B) put up and secure his portion of the cash and any overruns
C) before the city/county puts up money at this point
D) the city/county portion is bonded/loaned
E) we legally will be securing a profit on our investment
F) similar to the US bail out of GM, mechanically, it sounds like
So we have little risk as a city, stand to make a material profit on our investment, and get a new world class entertainment facility and two sports teams as well?
The $500 million arena would be paid for mostly by a private investment group led by Seattle native Christopher Hansen, but includes city and county financing that would be repaid over the next 30 years through rent on the arena and tax revenue it generates, including property, sales and admissions taxes.
The proposal includes no new taxes, and the city and county wouldn't pay anything until the teams were secured. Construction would take about two years.
The investors would rent the facility from the city and county, and Fred Podesta, the director of finance and administrative services for Seattle, said if there's a revenue shortfall, taxpayers would still be protected by an agreement that investors would pay the difference.
The deal also requires a "security fund" set up by the investors, which would eventually include three year's worth of debt payments. The investors would also have a fund for upgrades, so the city wouldn't be responsible for fixing up the arena as it ages.
The contract would require the NBA team to stay for 30 years -- the duration of the lease.
@19, the downside is the risk that these promises turn out to be pie in the sky, as so often has been the case when it comes to public financing of sports arenas.
Thank you 15. There is no $200 million lying around. It would be raised via tax on revenue generated by the facility itself. Also, no basketball or hockey patron is going to pay a luxury tax or seat license or whatever to fund schools or libraries. That's what we all pay taxes for. This is an example of a user fee, as the pro-tolling people like to call it.
Odd that this was approved without yet having a team (NBA or NHL) slated to come to the city.
On the radio this morning, I heard that as far as basketball goes it's more likely that the Hornets would relocate here than the Kings, as the Hornets are owned by the NBA (co-owned by all team owners), and currently it's losing everyone money. Their average attendance is just 14K, 4th lowest in the league. But that actually beats what the Sonics got over their 40-year span, so it makes one wonder about the strength of this "investment."
Regardless, I hope they reuse Sonics as their team name.
Fuck this shit. If we're not going to own the teams, who's to say the teams won't desert again. I want the city to own the teams as well. If we're going to fuck up our roads some more, reduce capacity, and increase attractions causing everybody to suffer, then let's at least make some real money on this bitch.
Can we have a referendum on this? It's the Seattle Way!
@ 19 the devil is in the details. The house always wins, and the City of Seattle isn't the house. We'll be losing $ somewhere I'm sure, if it isn't by the teams leaving us holding the bag in under 10 years or threatening to leave and renegotiating favorable terms for them, then likely in the fine print there is something like how we end up paying for everything if they make it into the playoffs like how the Mariners cost us a quarter of a million bucks every playoff game.
@30 - For lying through his crocodile smile that he fully intended to keep the Sonics in Seattle, all the while making plans to move them to OKC?
Um, no.
And, although it would do my cranky heart a world of good, I suppose we shouldn't name the new stadium "FUCK YOU HOWARD SCHULTZ", either...
I mean, I don't relish taking a team away from a city, any city, but I highly doubt that the lying, back-room dealing, back-stabbing, underhanded-ness of the way that Schultz/Bennett deal went down will EVER be replicated..
Also, Mr. Szilagyi, just because there's a contract for 30 years, doesn't mean they couldn't desert and pay the penalty if the prospects were more financially lucrative in other sections. I mean, come on...contracts are only pieces of paper with a system of fines and penalties for breaking them.
At least King Kemper didn't get to aid a pro sport to his Eastern Washington kingdom. Say what you will about the financing and the payoff, it will bring suburban $ into Seattle, and that's good.
I'm with @39. If this really were such a great deal for the city to borrow a ton of money to finance this, why wouldn't the private ownership just finance it their damn selves?
@40, you know it'll be awfully close to Starbucks headquarters. I wonder if it could possibly be designed such that when viewed from the angle of Starbucks the arena facade resembles a middle finger.
If this really were such a great deal for the city to borrow a ton of money to finance this, why wouldn't the private ownership just finance it their damn selves?
Because the city benefits from it.
As an analogy, if you and your neighbors share a clogged sewer line, wouldn't you ask your neighbors to chip in to get it fixed?
And if they responded "if it's such a great deal to have a working sewer, why don't you pay for it?" you'd rightly think they were assholes.
I call/scream bullshit. The $200 million is funded by taxes on tickets, concessions, whatever. "Self-funding"... Sooooooooo, why don't they just self-finance this boondoggle? With a little help from that traditional money source for construction projects, the banks? Why is the city/county/etc. even involved, except for help with zoning, traffic, and so on? This is a scam, and you sports groupies waving the flag for this bullshit should go fuck yourselves.
I admit as an NHL fan, it has an allure. But, given the recent history of sports stadiums and Seattle, I'm not so enthusiastic. I do believe there are more important issues.
How many times do we have to say "NO!" to this crap? Vote after vote after vote makes it clear: we don't want these expensive monstrosities in our city!!
@58: The City doesn't benefit nearly as much as the team owners
Depends. Some teams break even or lose money, others are profitable. Usually the city's return is tied to the owner's return, both of which tend to go up or down depending on the number of empty seats.
Admittedly, even the owners of a money-losing team usually end up in the black once they sell the franchise at a profit. That's why Howard Schultz dumped the Sonics.
@63 - Yeah! Each football, baseball, and soccer season you can see people staying away in DROVES from those terrible stadia! Why, the area around Safeco and the Clink is a veritable ghost town on game days!!!
There was no discussion of vegetarian options for the concessions. There needs to be a committee to discuss forming a committee to discuss this. It's the Seattle way.
Sounds like the deal that the City of Glendale gave the then-owners of the Phoenix Coyotes about ten years ago. The same Coyotes that are the potential candidates to move to Seattle. It's amazing how bankruptcy can dissolve all of these commitments. So, City of Seattle, tread lightly.
A bunch of 'tards dont understand financing - this is a great deal that the city and region will benefit from greatly! Good paying construction jobs for a while, and some additional decent part time and service jobs in Pioneer Square and SoDo.
For better or worse, City services are funded thru sales taxes and prop taxes. The more retail sales and higher prop values, the more $ there will be in the till for libraires and homeless shelters and puppies. Not everyone can work for a non-profit!
"Why would the city finance this instead of the private owners?"
Simple. Government bonds get preferred tax treatment, hence lower interest rates, saving crap loads of money on $200 million in bonds.
I'm extremely skeptical about deals such as this, but this one seems to provide protections for the public. In particular, the public contribution is capped (in addition to being paid off without new taxes), the teams have to cover any shortfalls, and the teams even pay for upgrades to the facility. Sure, we should go over the final agreement with a magnifying glass to look for problems, but at first glance, it looks good. (And I don't even like basketball or hockey.)
Maybe I don't comprehend high finance, but as I understand this deal, neither the city nor the county has to put up one thin dime until there are both NBA and NHL franchises signed, sealed, and delivered. Until that time -- which is unlikely to happen for at least half a dozen years -- all costs will be borne by Hansen and his colleagues. Who knows what the financial status of city, county, state, nation, and world will look like that far in the future?
Since contractors and construction companies don't work for free, and since the professional leagues aren't going to grant franchises to a city until it has an up-to-standards facility just about ready to open, this implies that Hansen will actually front the public contribution. He'll be in for about $500 million, with the city and county refunding his $200 million security deposit only after the whole thing -- arena and two teams -- is ready to start generating revenues.
This sounds to me like an extraordinarily good deal, if you assume (as I do) that professional sports are enough of a boon for civic culture that they contribute positively to the city's and region's well-being.
One monkey wrench ... an NHL-quality rink simply cannot be shoehorned into Key Arena. Would the NHL really go for a deal where an acceptable rink wasn't available from Day 1?
@79 nailed it. The people that like this deal are not all just "sports groupies" that would be celebrating any possible stadium deal, no matter how bad it fleeced the city.
It just turns out that from what we know so far this proposed deal is really fucking good for the city, so we're excited.
I like you people. I sincerely hope you're not fucked raw and left to die. That said, was there a periscope of perspicacity anywhere in the roiling sea of credulous hackery? Did anyone at that presser ask hard questions to which there were less-than-satisfying answers? (Goldy was apparently in the throes of multiple orgasms.)
Will the entire agreements be available for public dissection before final approval? Whom did (or will) the city use as their expert negotiator (nobody?) for this deal? Is Chris Hansen using personal funds in this endeavor, and if so, how exactly did he accumulate hundreds of millions of scratch in just 14 years as principal of a smallish hedge fund ($3B under management)? Or is this a major undertaking of Valiant Capital itself?
Chris Hansen is an idiot if he doesn't have 15 different escape clauses in this ironclad 30-year commitment, and if he is an idiot, well... as someone else pointed out, there's always bankruptcy.
"The study rob! likes to cite" (thanks gg!) is here if anyone's interested. There's also this (warning! NYT link!!!!!1!).
I don't buy it. And don't WANT to buy it. The safest thing for taxpayers to do at this point is to be as skeptical as possible.
And another thing-- traffic is already miserable through this area already, and now we're talking about yet another multimillion dollar construction project that will impact it? No. Thank. You.
BTW, according to every source I could find, the Kingdome won't be paid off until 2015, not this year, as some other commenters have suggested. The debt may be retired this year, but that's a different thing.
@80... It might happen sooner than you think. Both the NHL and NBA own teams that need owners (New Orleans in the NBA and Phoenix in the NHL).
Of course we do need to find a group to buy the NHL team and there is where will they play until the new arena is ready - ShoWare, Everett Events Center...
@26 And every time I buy lunch at the UW hospital cafeteria and pay an extra stadium tax for a facility I've never set foot in, that's a user fee how? We'll all get fucked for this corporate welfare, as usual.
rob! Thank you again - those are great. I think those suggest the secret to our Mayor's cheerful smile at the presser. It may be that he realized how well-worn a path to reelection he's just stepped onto. And he needed it, too. Which also goes to explain why our County Exec behind him was a bit dour - this might be the first time Dow's seen a real chance he may have to spend another term dealing with that man.
@77, and a bunch of other "tards" don't understand sports stadium economics at all. Like you. This facility, like every other sports facility, will not bring an appreciable amount of new money into the city, period. Most of the money it generates will be diverted from other things. Sports stadiums are not good investments, period.
Good jobs? In construction, at first, but those go away. After that it's minimum wage or less concessions and cleanup staff. You ever see the crowd of laborers hanging around the back of Qwest or Safeco, waiting for the fans to leave? Those are not "good jobs".
The players make good money, of course, but there's not very many of them, and they mostly won't live in Seattle. Chris Hansen doesn't either.
This is a pure gift to Hansen & Co., who will make hundreds of millions if they get the teams, and to the mayor, who needs this deal to get reelected.
haven't we learned anything from the economic downturn?
his fund is going to buy up the bonds from the city and turn it into a collateralized debt obligation and sell the derivatives to sucker investors who don't know the AAA rated bonds are really junk and the property will go into default and the taxpayers will foot the bill while the hedge fund manager will get a massive payout because he bet against it!
@88 The reason to be excited is that there is no "stadium tax" this time around. If you'd read about the proposal, you'll find that it is fundamentally different from how the Clink and Safeco were paid for.
@ Fnarf - Of course Hansen is going to make money. He wouldn't be doing this if he wasn't going to make money.
But he's going to be making money by returning the Sonics to Seattle and, bonus! adding an NHL franchise to the city. Why shouldn't he reap the benefits of his investment?
We can argue whether or not pro sports teams are a boon to a metropolitan area (I think they are) but that's not really the issue here. This deal, from what we can tell at, what, the third hour of its existence, is a pretty damn good one as far as sports stadium deals go. Why not get with the positive? Why be all Grampa Grumpypants so soon, before we know conclusively that we've been fucked (which I don't think we will be)??
@79 has it right - there's a difference between approaching something with due caution and flat-out screaming bloody murder at the outset of a proposed enterprise.
I've only read the first couple dozen comments, and can't believe how many people here don't get it. Or at least, pretend that they don't.
This is not money diverted from any other government service. The city/county would sell up to $200 million in bonds, the debt service secured by taxes generated by the facility (admissions, sales, property, B&O, etc.) plus rent paid by the operator and the teams.
Without the revenue from arena, there is not money to securitize the bonds, and without the arena, no need to issue them.
This proposal is structured to have zero impact on city/county revenues, either general fund or other accounts. I asked county budget director Dwight Dively if they had accounted for entertainment dollars being drawn from other venues, that generate revenue to the general fund, and he said that they had. As for the state, it's a sweet deal. It collects its full share of sales, property and B&O tax from the Arena and its activities.
This is very different from the two stadiums down the street, whose bonds were secured and paid off by new taxes on hotels, car rentals and restaurants.
Argue all you want whether this is good investment, but this is simply not $200 million that we could've spent on something else.
@96, see, there's a public servant I can trust completely. Get Dively to say he's not worried about it, and I'll quit worrying. Thanks for mentioning him.
FYI, Pittsburgh's Consol Energy Center, which opened in 2010, bears a $321 million pricetag. It's LEED Gold Certified.
Land is probably less costly in Pittsburgh than in Seattle, though Consol Energy is closer to downtown than the proposed Sodo site. There's very little, if any, need to earthquake-proof anything in Pittsburgh.
Also, its only professional tenant is the Penguins. I have the feeling that an NBA team's locker room, offices, and training facilities would be a good bit more costly than whatever they've provided for Duquesne University hoops at Consol Energy.
How much do we still owe on the Kingdome?
It's like buying a garage in the hopes that a car will someday park itself there.
So much financial ignorance on display here I half-suspect you all still keep your money in piggy banks.
A) secure the teams
B) put up and secure his portion of the cash and any overruns
C) before the city/county puts up money at this point
D) the city/county portion is bonded/loaned
E) we legally will be securing a profit on our investment
F) similar to the US bail out of GM, mechanically, it sounds like
So we have little risk as a city, stand to make a material profit on our investment, and get a new world class entertainment facility and two sports teams as well?
What is the downside?
HOOPS'N'PUCKS
HOOPS'N'PUCKS
HOOPS'N'PUCKS
FOR
THE
WIN
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xae1h_f…
On the radio this morning, I heard that as far as basketball goes it's more likely that the Hornets would relocate here than the Kings, as the Hornets are owned by the NBA (co-owned by all team owners), and currently it's losing everyone money. Their average attendance is just 14K, 4th lowest in the league. But that actually beats what the Sonics got over their 40-year span, so it makes one wonder about the strength of this "investment."
Regardless, I hope they reuse Sonics as their team name.
Back on topic, I guess McGinn really doesn't want that second term, does he?
They should they got the rights to the name, if not the history.
Fuck this shit. If we're not going to own the teams, who's to say the teams won't desert again. I want the city to own the teams as well. If we're going to fuck up our roads some more, reduce capacity, and increase attractions causing everybody to suffer, then let's at least make some real money on this bitch.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seattle_Met…
That ad has likely been selected especially for you because of a Google search you did.
I noticed RackSpace ads popping up on SLOG shortly after I had been searching for internet hosting providers.
@ 19 the devil is in the details. The house always wins, and the City of Seattle isn't the house. We'll be losing $ somewhere I'm sure, if it isn't by the teams leaving us holding the bag in under 10 years or threatening to leave and renegotiating favorable terms for them, then likely in the fine print there is something like how we end up paying for everything if they make it into the playoffs like how the Mariners cost us a quarter of a million bucks every playoff game.
Um, no.
And, although it would do my cranky heart a world of good, I suppose we shouldn't name the new stadium "FUCK YOU HOWARD SCHULTZ", either...
I mean, I don't relish taking a team away from a city, any city, but I highly doubt that the lying, back-room dealing, back-stabbing, underhanded-ness of the way that Schultz/Bennett deal went down will EVER be replicated..
HOOPS'N'PUCKS FTW
The art and theater kids hate sports.
@30: do we now officially forgive Clay Bennett?
Howard Schultz is responsible for shipping the Sonics to Oklahoma, and no, we don't forgive him.
Sounds reasonable to me.
(Our posts crossed in the intertubes.. :)
Architects, are you listening?!?
:-D
Because the city benefits from it.
As an analogy, if you and your neighbors share a clogged sewer line, wouldn't you ask your neighbors to chip in to get it fixed?
And if they responded "if it's such a great deal to have a working sewer, why don't you pay for it?" you'd rightly think they were assholes.
Exactly!
Depends. Some teams break even or lose money, others are profitable. Usually the city's return is tied to the owner's return, both of which tend to go up or down depending on the number of empty seats.
Admittedly, even the owners of a money-losing team usually end up in the black once they sell the franchise at a profit. That's why Howard Schultz dumped the Sonics.
http://www.seattle.gov/mayor/media/PDF/1…
Again, examples from this document about how this is a scam?
/satire
These deals are NEVER, and that is not hyperbole, a good deal for the public.
I'm just waiting for this website to be updated:
http://www.fieldofschemes.com/
This is the foremost authority on arena/stadium funding and their effect on the public.
200 million is 200 million too much.
Ginnsanity !!!
For better or worse, City services are funded thru sales taxes and prop taxes. The more retail sales and higher prop values, the more $ there will be in the till for libraires and homeless shelters and puppies. Not everyone can work for a non-profit!
Simple. Government bonds get preferred tax treatment, hence lower interest rates, saving crap loads of money on $200 million in bonds.
I'm extremely skeptical about deals such as this, but this one seems to provide protections for the public. In particular, the public contribution is capped (in addition to being paid off without new taxes), the teams have to cover any shortfalls, and the teams even pay for upgrades to the facility. Sure, we should go over the final agreement with a magnifying glass to look for problems, but at first glance, it looks good. (And I don't even like basketball or hockey.)
Since contractors and construction companies don't work for free, and since the professional leagues aren't going to grant franchises to a city until it has an up-to-standards facility just about ready to open, this implies that Hansen will actually front the public contribution. He'll be in for about $500 million, with the city and county refunding his $200 million security deposit only after the whole thing -- arena and two teams -- is ready to start generating revenues.
This sounds to me like an extraordinarily good deal, if you assume (as I do) that professional sports are enough of a boon for civic culture that they contribute positively to the city's and region's well-being.
One monkey wrench ... an NHL-quality rink simply cannot be shoehorned into Key Arena. Would the NHL really go for a deal where an acceptable rink wasn't available from Day 1?
It just turns out that from what we know so far this proposed deal is really fucking good for the city, so we're excited.
Will the entire agreements be available for public dissection before final approval? Whom did (or will) the city use as their expert negotiator (nobody?) for this deal? Is Chris Hansen using personal funds in this endeavor, and if so, how exactly did he accumulate hundreds of millions of scratch in just 14 years as principal of a smallish hedge fund ($3B under management)? Or is this a major undertaking of Valiant Capital itself?
Chris Hansen is an idiot if he doesn't have 15 different escape clauses in this ironclad 30-year commitment, and if he is an idiot, well... as someone else pointed out, there's always bankruptcy.
"The study rob! likes to cite" (thanks gg!) is here if anyone's interested. There's also this (warning! NYT link!!!!!1!).
And another thing-- traffic is already miserable through this area already, and now we're talking about yet another multimillion dollar construction project that will impact it? No. Thank. You.
BTW, according to every source I could find, the Kingdome won't be paid off until 2015, not this year, as some other commenters have suggested. The debt may be retired this year, but that's a different thing.
Of course we do need to find a group to buy the NHL team and there is where will they play until the new arena is ready - ShoWare, Everett Events Center...
Good jobs? In construction, at first, but those go away. After that it's minimum wage or less concessions and cleanup staff. You ever see the crowd of laborers hanging around the back of Qwest or Safeco, waiting for the fans to leave? Those are not "good jobs".
The players make good money, of course, but there's not very many of them, and they mostly won't live in Seattle. Chris Hansen doesn't either.
This is a pure gift to Hansen & Co., who will make hundreds of millions if they get the teams, and to the mayor, who needs this deal to get reelected.
haven't we learned anything from the economic downturn?
his fund is going to buy up the bonds from the city and turn it into a collateralized debt obligation and sell the derivatives to sucker investors who don't know the AAA rated bonds are really junk and the property will go into default and the taxpayers will foot the bill while the hedge fund manager will get a massive payout because he bet against it!
AHHHHHH!!!! WE'RE GETTING PLAYED!!!
But he's going to be making money by returning the Sonics to Seattle and, bonus! adding an NHL franchise to the city. Why shouldn't he reap the benefits of his investment?
We can argue whether or not pro sports teams are a boon to a metropolitan area (I think they are) but that's not really the issue here. This deal, from what we can tell at, what, the third hour of its existence, is a pretty damn good one as far as sports stadium deals go. Why not get with the positive? Why be all Grampa Grumpypants so soon, before we know conclusively that we've been fucked (which I don't think we will be)??
@79 has it right - there's a difference between approaching something with due caution and flat-out screaming bloody murder at the outset of a proposed enterprise.
This is not money diverted from any other government service. The city/county would sell up to $200 million in bonds, the debt service secured by taxes generated by the facility (admissions, sales, property, B&O, etc.) plus rent paid by the operator and the teams.
Without the revenue from arena, there is not money to securitize the bonds, and without the arena, no need to issue them.
This proposal is structured to have zero impact on city/county revenues, either general fund or other accounts. I asked county budget director Dwight Dively if they had accounted for entertainment dollars being drawn from other venues, that generate revenue to the general fund, and he said that they had. As for the state, it's a sweet deal. It collects its full share of sales, property and B&O tax from the Arena and its activities.
This is very different from the two stadiums down the street, whose bonds were secured and paid off by new taxes on hotels, car rentals and restaurants.
Argue all you want whether this is good investment, but this is simply not $200 million that we could've spent on something else.
Land is probably less costly in Pittsburgh than in Seattle, though Consol Energy is closer to downtown than the proposed Sodo site. There's very little, if any, need to earthquake-proof anything in Pittsburgh.
Also, its only professional tenant is the Penguins. I have the feeling that an NBA team's locker room, offices, and training facilities would be a good bit more costly than whatever they've provided for Duquesne University hoops at Consol Energy.