PostJan 10, 2018#1226
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No one was hoodwinked. You highlighted the primary concern of most city voters in you post. This was another REGIONAL asset that the city would have assisted in financing alone. You're right, it would've generated revenue. It would've generated revenue for St. Louis restaurants, gas stations in Fenton, and hotels in St. Charles. Yet, 11% of our regions population (40% of which is considered in poverty) would've been the only contributing.robertn42 wrote: ↑Jan 10, 2018From my perspective its unfortunate that a segment of the city's population was hoodwinked by the narrative of TeamTIF and a handful of aldermen/alderwomen resulting in a missed opportunity to add a regional asset and revenue generating project.STLrainbow wrote: ↑Jan 09, 2018^ agreed; per usual Hartmann had a pretty good article over the holidays on how it's unfortunate the hopeful ownership group couldn't/wouldn't bring something to the table like the group from Nashville did. A more traditional public subsidy model like the city gives out regularly and wouldn't have required a public vote was the way to go.
https://www.stlmag.com/news/think-again ... -financin/
Some public participation but no tax increase required other than on tickets themselves. In this sense it wasn't so much a regionalism failure as opposed to an owners-not-digging-deeper failure.
Dave Peacock essentially confirmed that the group has moved on in an interview with Tim McKernan yesterday.
Good points. I can only hope that these missed opportunities drive us to work and think regionally. Anecdotally, I feel like momentum is building in this area and it is refreshing to hear area political and business leaders advocate for it.addxb2 wrote: ↑Jan 10, 2018No one was hoodwinked. You highlighted the primary concern of most city voters in you post. This was another REGIONAL asset that the city would have assisted in financing alone. You're right, it would've generated revenue. It would've generated revenue for St. Louis restaurants, gas stations in Fenton, and hotels in St. Charles. Yet, 11% of our regions population (40% of which is considered in poverty) would've been the only contributing.robertn42 wrote: ↑Jan 10, 2018From my perspective its unfortunate that a segment of the city's population was hoodwinked by the narrative of TeamTIF and a handful of aldermen/alderwomen resulting in a missed opportunity to add a regional asset and revenue generating project.STLrainbow wrote: ↑Jan 09, 2018^ agreed; per usual Hartmann had a pretty good article over the holidays on how it's unfortunate the hopeful ownership group couldn't/wouldn't bring something to the table like the group from Nashville did. A more traditional public subsidy model like the city gives out regularly and wouldn't have required a public vote was the way to go.
https://www.stlmag.com/news/think-again ... -financin/
Some public participation but no tax increase required other than on tickets themselves. In this sense it wasn't so much a regionalism failure as opposed to an owners-not-digging-deeper failure.
Dave Peacock essentially confirmed that the group has moved on in an interview with Tim McKernan yesterday.
Also, hosting STL FC games in Fenton isn't a great way to convince city voters that its a worthwhile investment. I like soccer, but not enough to drive 40 minute to Fenton at 6pm on a weeknight.
Am I still confused in thinking that it would have been funded from various angles from the ticket sale use tax?
As I understand it, It was a two layered vote.
If the 4 finalists all could put proposals on the table without a sales tax vote then it my mind that's on the ownership group. Nashville proposal would have been fine even yet they wouldn't budge. My guess is their risk tolerance wasn't as high as the other groups and that's where we are at this point.robertn42 wrote: ↑Jan 10, 2018From my perspective its unfortunate that a segment of the city's population was hoodwinked by the narrative of TeamTIF and a handful of aldermen/alderwomen resulting in a missed opportunity to add a regional asset and revenue generating project.STLrainbow wrote: ↑Jan 09, 2018^ agreed; per usual Hartmann had a pretty good article over the holidays on how it's unfortunate the hopeful ownership group couldn't/wouldn't bring something to the table like the group from Nashville did. A more traditional public subsidy model like the city gives out regularly and wouldn't have required a public vote was the way to go.
https://www.stlmag.com/news/think-again ... -financin/
Some public participation but no tax increase required other than on tickets themselves. In this sense it wasn't so much a regionalism failure as opposed to an owners-not-digging-deeper failure.
Dave Peacock essentially confirmed that the group has moved on in an interview with Tim McKernan yesterday.
right, and people read this and go "see! it would have been paid for by the use tax!" without considering that the city would have had to take out a 60-something million $ loan (or was it more? 100 million?) and then *hope* to be able to divert enough from the use tax to cover the payments over a 30-year period.
robertn42 wrote: ↑Jan 11, 2018For context, the annual St. Louis City budget is $1.053 Billion. The $4 million which would have been allocated on an annual basis to a civic asset downtown and adding social collateral to our region would have represented 00.38% of that. Our treasurer brings in over twice that amount in parking revenue and only $600k is turned over to the city.
Maybe, just maybe, any negative financial impact of the MLS project was blown out of proportion by a political group that has ulterior motives.
For fuller context, the real budget is about $485 million annually. The rest of that $1 billion is for the airport and water facilities. And with that $485m budget, we're still unable to pay for many essential services. Also with that $485m we repeatedly fail to pay a $5m annual fund for affordable housing which is supposed to be tied to the, you guessed it, Use Tax.robertn42 wrote: ↑Jan 11, 2018For context, the annual St. Louis City budget is $1.053 Billion. The $4 million which would have been allocated on an annual basis to a civic asset downtown and adding social collateral to our region would have represented 00.38% of that. Our treasurer brings in over twice that amount in parking revenue and only $600k is turned over to the city.
Maybe, just maybe, any negative financial impact of the MLS project was blown out of proportion by a political group that has ulterior motives.
Is that a joke or do you think they actually have a plan B. I'm clueless so I don't wan to get excited again.San Luis Native wrote: I can't wait for the STL ownership group to reveal its plan B. With so much time under wraps now it's bound to be HUGE.
There does appear to be evidence that team values are climbing rapidly - even more than expected. An 8.63% stake of Orlando City was just sold for $42.3 million. That would make the value of the club $490.53 million.courtland wrote: ↑Mar 28, 2018Darn it.... I wonder if we missed the boat....
http://start.att.net/player/category/ne ... -bloomberg
Sorry dude, dry humor, sarcastic comment on my part not showing thru too well without tone voice... Thought everyone was on the same page that there is no plan B and the owner group was made up of a bunch of self serving a holes.
Ha, I think my optimist side got the best of me thinking there was a chance the group wasn't a bunch of self serving a holes.San Luis Native wrote: ↑Mar 28, 2018Sorry dude, dry humor, sarcastic comment on my part not showing thru too well without tone voice... Thought everyone was on the same page that there is no plan B and the owner group was made up of a bunch of self serving a holes.
SMH. I get that a lot of people on these boards hate giving money to sports but wow.San Luis Native wrote: ↑Mar 28, 2018Sorry dude, dry humor, sarcastic comment on my part not showing thru too well without tone voice... Thought everyone was on the same page that there is no plan B and the owner group was made up of a bunch of self serving a holes.
Who said that a lot of us hate giving money to sports? I'm a huge fan of the Blues and Cardinals and give them plenty of money through tickets and concessions. I believe many people on this forum do the same.
Sorry, clarify that hate for cities to give money to sports.chaifetz10 wrote: ↑Mar 29, 2018Who said that a lot of us hate giving money to sports? I'm a huge fan of the Blues and Cardinals and give them plenty of money through tickets and concessions. I believe many people on this forum do the same.
The difference is that the STL MLS prospective ownership group drew their line in the sand and then walked away when the city refused to cross it. There were false arguments made, a rush to vote, and then they left soccer fans high and dry when they could have easily made up the difference through private financing. Look, if an MLS team was that great of a deal, why couldn't they have just found one more investor? Because that would dilude their profit margins. It was never about passion, but always about making a decent ROI through the use of tax dollars under the guise of another silver bullet project to fix downtown.