Posted on 08/13/2015 6:53:56 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
Today, Wisconsin governor and presidential candidate Scott Walker signed a bill providing public financing for a new basketball arena in downtown Milwaukee. Walker has recently taken some heat on the campaign trail from fellow conservatives, who object to taxpayer money being used to finance arenas.
An ideological aversion to taxpayer money being used to finance sports arenas is fine, but the actual structure of the Milwaukee deal is far more complicated than its opponents are letting on. Just today, for instance, Michael Tanner writes that using $250 million of Wisconsin taxpayers money is a quintessential example of crony capitalism, citing the plans ties to a co-chair of Walkers presidential campaign. I suppose six Democrats in the state senate and 17 in the state assembly who voted for the plan are concerned about rewarding Walker donors?
Rarely will one hear the actual details of the complicated plan, which have been woefully misrepresented in the national media so far. A large chunk of the arena will be paid for through a $2 per ticket user fee. Of the $2 per ticket fee, 50 cents will go to offset $80 million in bonds issued and paid for by the state. This portion of the fee is expected to provide around $500,000 per year toward paying off the bonds.
The rest of the bonds will be financed with state tax revenues, but theres an important catch the remaining $3.5 million per year the state will pay over the next two decades is more than offset by the annual income taxes the Milwaukee Bucks franchise pays the state. According to state records, the Bucks pay $6.5 million per year in state income taxes. Every NBA player who comes to Milwaukee to face the Bucks pays a portion of his income to Wisconsin. This isnt expected revenue from future economic development this is money already being paid to the state. Thus, taxpayers wont be paying the states portion, the Bucks will be.
And with the NBAs salary cap expected to explode next year, the Bucks contribution to the project will only increase. The Wisconsin Department of Revenue estimates conservatively that over the next 20 years, the Bucks franchise will add $300 million to the states coffers via income taxes. If the team were to leave the state the threat that loomed over negotiations for a new arena that money in the state budget would have to be made up somewhere. State taxpayers would likely feel the brunt of the shortfall in one way or another.
Another $80 million of the arenas total costs will be financed by reducing the states annual aid to Milwaukee County. So rather than raising taxes to pay for the arena, the countys contribution is being financed by a spending cut. And that cut will likely be offset by a plan to have the state take over the collection of funds owed by delinquent Milwaukee County taxpayers. Call it the deadbeat tax.
More aid will go to finance bonds issued by the local entertainment district, which will be partly paid for by a combination of the per ticket user fee and existing hotel-room, rental-car, and food-and-beverage taxes levied by the district.
The remaining $47 million will come from the creation of a tax incremental financing district. Such TIF districts are typically funded with revenues generated by the locality itself. In this case, the citys contribution is a new parking structure.
Its also worth pointing out that the Bucks current owners and their former owner are ponying up $250 million of their own money to pay for the arena so it isnt as if they arent also personally invested in the project. Scott Walker isnt just handing them a gift.
If one is naturally inclined to oppose any kind of governmental involvement in the building of arenas, thats fine, as long as equal scorn is heaped on less publicized building plans. Last year, the state approved an $82 million chemistry lab at the University of WisconsinLa Crosse. That plan seems unlikely to make its way into any discussion of Scott Walkers presidential campaign. Every politician who stays in office long enough will eventually vote for some sort of multi-million-dollar construction project. Many of those projects wont have nearly the economic impact of a new downtown arena that keeps an NBA franchise in town.
Its much easier to accuse Walker of spending $250 million in taxpayer money than it is to explain the plans complicated funding mechanisms. And those mechanisms are certainly fair game for people who object to any sort of governmental aid whatsoever for the construction of sports arenas. But the fact is that without the new arena, Wisconsin taxpayers would be far worse off and the Bucks wouldnt be around to pick up any part of the tab.
Yes, it's an every fourth year phenom here on FR, like recurring herpes.
Are you supporting Trump?
Yes, I read it. I know this...Walker’s your guy and you’ll excuse anything because of that.
Who is your candidate?
Who do you want in the WH?
It's an established pattern.
I did read the article. Why does the state government have to fund this ?
Who’s your candidate?
Because Walker's crony capitalist donors said so.
Who is your candidate?
Quid pro quo???
It's how things get done with the GOPe. Just ask Jeb, Rick Perry, McCain and every other cheap labor Chamber of Commerce sock puppet who runs for high office. Walker is just another paper cut out from their player roster.
In general, I oppose government subsides for commercial enterprises, but politicians are particularly attracted to these schemes. It has been going on forever in one form or another. If people don’t like it, they should vote out the bums, but most people seem to like these deals which, of course, is why politicians do it.
In our fair city, Wal Mart has been negotiating for tax abatements when they build a Wal Mart building. No one complains. When the abatement is scheduled to expire, Wal Mart builds another structure. We have had three different locations in 15 years and we will see another before long I am guessing.
That’s how Trump built so many of his enterprises - with tax abatements, and usually with no money down on the deals. He is actually very conservative with his money.
Anything Walker does in WI is OK by me as long as he stays there. :-)
As if all the Buck's taxes would go to the arena and not have been used for something else? This argument is patently absurd. Walker made the decision that a half a loaf is better than none. The Bucks are still getting the other half.
So sorry. All that article does is spin. Here are two more basic questions: why should taxpayers be on the hook to build a private sports stadium at all? And, Secondly, if its such a smashingly good deal, why would taxpayers in the state of Wisconsin need to be involved at all?
But its not crony capitalism. Oh no. Not that. Anything but that.
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