Posted on 08/15/2015 9:07:50 AM PDT by conservativejoy
Two days ago, I praised Gov. Scott Walkers quiet conservatism. Today, Ill criticize his inconsistency. The Milwaukee Bucks decided they needed a new basketball arena and they told the government to pay for it. If politicos didnt cough up $250 million, the NBA warned that the Bucks might leave Wisconsin. Nice team you have here, Milwaukee. Itd be a shame if something happened to it
Taxpayers would rightly be furious if a private business demanded they fund a supermarket, an office building, or a strip mall why on earth should they send their hard-earned money to millionaire athletes and billionaire owners? But, like most politicians of both parties, Walker quickly knuckled under to a threat from a major sports league:
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R) signed legislation Wednesday to spend $250 million from taxpayers on a new arena for the Milwaukee Bucks basketball team a deal he has championed for months despite fierce opposition from fiscal conservatives who usually agree with him.
The teams ownership group which includes one of Walkers top campaign fundraisers had threatened to move the Bucks to another state if the taxpayer financing did not come through. Walker said he did not want Wisconsin to lose the millions of dollars in taxes it collects on player and staff salaries, along with the other perks that come with having a professional basketball team in the state.
The return on investment is 3 to 1 on this, so we think this is a good, solid move as a good steward of the taxpayers money here in Wisconsin, Walker said Wednesday morning after he signed the legislation. This is just simple mathematics.
The teams investors pitched building a new arena in downtown Milwaukee that would anchor a new entertainment district, revitalizing that part of the city and creating more jobs. The total cost has been pegged at $500 million. Kohl agreed to chip in $100 million, with the new owners paying at least $150 million and Wisconsin taxpayers picking up the remaining $250 million.
Walkers math is based on the team actually leaving Milwaukee, which isnt close to a sure thing. The San Francisco Giants threatened to leave if the city didnt build them a new stadium. The famously profligate city called their bluff and the Giants found a way to build it without tax funds. The same is happening in Los Angeles for an insanely expensive football stadium. If these extremely liberal cities wont bow to the cronies, why should Walker?
In addition, study after study has shown that sports owners promises of economic impact rarely if ever pan out.
Economists have long known stadiums to be poor public investments. Most of the jobs created by stadium-building projects are either temporary, low-paying, or out-of-state contracting jobsnone of which contribute greatly to the local economy. (Athletes can easily circumvent most taxes in the state in which they play.) Most fans do not spend additional money as a result of a new stadium; they re-direct money they would have spent elsewhere on movies, dining, bowling, tarot-card reading, or other businesses. And for every out-of-state fan who comes into the city on game day and buys a bucket of Bud Light Platinum, another non-fan decides not to visit and purchases his latte at the coffee shop next door. All in all, building a stadium is a poor use of a few hundred million dollars.
This isnt news, by any stretch, but it turns out were spending even more money on stadiums than we originally thought. In her new book Public/Private Partnerships for Major League Sports Facilities, Judith Grant Long, associate professor of Urban Planning at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, shatters previous conceptions of just how much money the public has poured into these deals. By the late 90s, the first wave of damning economic studies conducted by Robert Baade and Richard Dye, James Quirk and Rodney Fort, and Roger Noll and Andrew Zimbalist came to light, but well afterwards, from 2001 to 2010, 50 new sports facilities were opened, receiving $130 million more, on average, than those opened in the preceding decade. (All figures from Longs book adjusted for 2010 dollars.) In the 1990s, the average public cost for a new facility was estimated at $142 million, but by the end of the 2000s, that figure jumped to $241 million: an increase of 70 percent.
Economists have also been, according to Long, drastically underestimating the true cost of these projects. They fail to consider public subsidies for land and infrastructure, the ongoing costs of operations, capital improvements (weneedanewscoreboard!), municipal services (all those traffic cops), and foregone property taxes (almost every major-league franchise located in the U.S. does not pay property taxes due to a legal loophole with questionable rationale as the normally value-neutral Long put it). Due to these oversights, Long calculates that economists have been underestimating public subsidies for sports facilities by 25 percent, raising the figure to $259 million per facility in operation during the 2010 season.
Sports fans and everyday citizens still cite anecdotal evidence as an argument for public financing. That neighborhood was a dump; now its beautiful. No one used to go downtown at night; now its hopping! Although the immediate area around the venue might look nicer, the areas further out look slightly worse. This is hard to visualize, so let me create a simplified example.
anytown-stadium-before-afterHere are maps showing the 13 neighborhoods of Anytown, U.S.A. The darker the green, the more economic activity that neighborhood has. Neighborhoods 3, 6, and 10, have the most economic activity, while 7, 8 and 13 have the least.
Neighborhood 13 is the worst of the worst. Abandoned factories, vacant warehouses, and graffiti-covered multi-unit housing. The area was first mapped out decades ago, so the streets, lampposts, sewer lines, and everything else need a major upgrade.
Wanting to revitalize the district, Anytowns City Council named Neighborhood 13 as the site for a sparkling new, $500 million taxpayer-funded stadium. Urban planners can tear down the ugliest empty buildings and seize the rest using eminent domain. Once the stadium is built, private business will surround it with hip new restaurants, bars, and hotels, while the city improves the infrastructure all around. More economic activity in Neighborhood 13 means more tax revenue for the city. So naturally, the stadium will pay for itself over the long haul, right?
Not so much. Three years after the Anytown Stadium is built, Neighborhood 13 is doing pretty well. The city cut tax rates to lure investors, so hotels and restaurants popped up around it. Sure, some decrepit areas remain, but Neighborhood 13 hasnt been this vital in years.
But look at the neighborhoods around it. Sure, theyre okay, but each one has a little less economic activity. Neighborhood 13 is more green, but several surrounding areas are a little bit less green. The guy who wanted to expand his restaurant chain built in 13 instead of 6. The woman who wanted to create a sports bar told her realtor to buy in 13 instead of 12. Neighborhood 13 is no longer the poorest in town, but now Neighborhood 7 is in even worse shape.
Anytown residents used to spend money at their local malls and movie theaters. Now the richies in Neighborhood 3 blow $250 at a game instead of buying that French coffee grinder at their local Williams-Sonoma. One neighborhoods loss is Neighborhood 13′s gain. Notice how little new economic activity is being created; its merely shifting dollars from one part of Anytown to another. Worse still, Anytown created the Stadium District Enterprise Zone, lowering the taxes in 13. So the town is collecting less total revenue than they were before the stadium was built. And though the stadium area looks packed on game nights, its still pretty empty on the 325 days a year there isnt an event.
Granted, Anytown is an intentionally simplified example. Urban areas are fluid, unique entities with their own layouts, suburbs, economic patterns, etc. And we shouldnt forget that its nice to get the once-per-decade boost of an all-star game or championship game. But these brief booms slightly mitigate the initial outlay; they dont come close to paying for it.
Many government revitalization schemes have the same negligible-to-negative impact. Phoenix had a economically depressed street, so they improved it with an insanely expensive light rail system. Now that street is much nicer but the streets north and south of it are in even worse shape. If the original street had 100 vacant storefronts, the streets around it now have 150.
Basically, city planners are pushing the air from one side of the half-filled balloon to the other. And each time they do, a little more air seeps out the end. Its usually a net-negative impact. New wealth isnt being created; old wealth is shifting around.
If Scott Walker or any other politician wants to argue for a taxpayer stadium, he can point to civic pride, prestige, or other non-tangible benefits. But if he reads the stack of studies from every side of the political spectrum, he cannot in good conscience argue that it will create an economic benefit.
Thats why this is such a great site. We have time to learn the details and cut through the kind of cloudy information that the main stream media shovels.
Six figures consulting at some of Americas largest corporations, you?
We talk different languages, as you say.
Too bad yours isnt one used by 99% of the English speaking population.
Concurring bump...if it were Donald Trump doing this deal I'm sure the naysayers would be all for it.
I’m not a member, so couldn’t access the article.
As a matter of fact it was supposed to be proposed as a budget item which would mean there would be no discussion about it. Instead Walker insisted it be considered as a separate item and therefore both houses were to vote on it. . You could imagine what Trump would be doing to it when he lies about Walker’s state budget.
Exactly.
Make them pay!
Especially since the Menomonee Nation offered to help fund the arena if the state approved the building of a casino in Kenosha. That meant that the arena would have been entirely privately funded along with bringing more jobs to the state. Walker turned them down.
Taxpayers should not be funding sport arena period. That is not what taxes are for.
Only by the people who like to go to Buck’s games and don’t mind their taxes being used to fund someone else’s entertainment.
Lots of big companies and businesses left the state. Should the tax payer fund them all in hopes that they stay?
Private money could have funded this project completely and we could have added more jobs and tax revenue to the state by allowing the casino to be built in Kenosha and Walker said no to that math.
-—Only by the people who like to go to Bucks games and dont mind their taxes being used to fund someone elses entertainment.
No, you would have criticized him for that as well because you are an all around dishonest person. Your post simply ignores the facts of this situation.
——Lots of big companies and businesses left the state.
Lots of big companies and businesses left the state under JIM DOYLE (fixed it for you). Walker has reversed the tide.
Under Walker the unemployment rate has dropped by half to FOUR POINT NINE PERCENT and is in the top 20 in the US.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U.S._states_by_unemployment_rate
———added more jobs and tax revenue to the state by allowing the casino to be built in Kenosha and Walker said no to that math.
Dishonest. Jim Doyle gave the store to the tribes and any casino building requires unanimous consent or there are major revenue losses.
Wisconsin would have lost very siginificant revenues from the Potawatomies.
****As tensions rise over a proposed Indian casino in Kenosha that would compete with the Forest County Potawatomi tribes Milwaukee gaming operation, the Potawatomi are refusing to pay their casino fee of at least $25 million to the state.
In a letter to lawmakers Tuesday, Gov. Scott Walker said the payment was due June 30 and its absence is having an effect on the states two-year budget, which has only limited reserves.
Walker said his administration faces a tricky task in deciding whether to approve the more than $800 million off-reservation casino proposed for Kenosha by the Menominee tribe.
Compact agreements negotiated by Gov. Jim Doyles administration include clauses to reimburse some tribes for losses resulting from a new tribal competitor, payments that could equal tens of millions of dollars to the Potawatomi and the Ho-Chunk tribes.
The math never added up to anything but red-ink, unfortunately, since Doyle took the Indians money and tied the State up.
We don’t mind sharing our good fortune. We’re not that way . . .
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