#61
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Unfortunately, we are all prisoners to the decisions of politicians and sports team owners, both of which are not the brightest bulbs.
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It's not a new bike, it's another bike. Last edited by Mr. Pink; 04-23-2023 at 11:25 AM. |
#62
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please don't take anything I say personally, I am an idiot. |
#63
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But it is a consistent position, so you got that going for ya. |
#64
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When multiple sources conclude the opposite of what you believe, it's a weak argument to just claim that all those sources are biased.
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#65
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Well, Ok, first, post links to these studies. Let's get specific then. (I feel like Musk saying, give me one example of hate speech)
Then, second, tell me who funded these studies. Always follow the money.
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It's not a new bike, it's another bike. |
#66
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Yeah, not sure I'd use the Ravens stadium in Baltimore as a "good" example of public funding for sports stadium. Fortunately for the city of Baltimore, much of the $300,000,000 public subsidy to build the stadium and woo the Browns from Cleveland was borne by the state, not the city. That said, the stadium is hemmed in by parking lots, highways, railroad tracks, and light industry. Not exactly a stadium that's going to catalyze much in the way of urban development in Baltimore. There's a better argument in favor of its neighbor Camden Yards, which at least sits adjacent to downtown and is used for 81 games a year. Plopping a football stadium in the middle of a city surrounded by parking, which will be filled a handful of times each year is a much much more dubious a proposition in terms of its overall economic potential. Camden Yards is really one of the only examples I can think of where the initial public investment in an urban stadium likely contributed to broader economic development benefits over time to justify the initial and ongoing subsidies. There are very, very few other examples I can think of. For Oakland, I just hope that when they bulldoze the Coliseum, they put the land to good use and help chip away at the East Bay's housing crisis. If they can rezone the land and attract a commercial developer to build several thousand units of workforce and middle class housing, that would be far more impactful for the city than a new stadium.
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#67
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You can start with this recent study:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....act_id=4340483 To save everyone the trouble of reading 77 pages, this is the first paragraph of their conclusion: Quote:
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#68
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Are you sure about that 300 million number? Btw, many cities have tried housing projects. Many of them are horrible slums and some have been bulldozed. I'll take football, instead.
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It's not a new bike, it's another bike. Last edited by Mr. Pink; 04-23-2023 at 09:10 PM. |
#69
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I think Washington DC is a good example. The Nationals stadium was built in an area that was previously high crime. I used to travel to DC often to do work at the Navy Yard and I would stay at the Marriott Navy Yard which was about five blocks away. The walk to the Navy Yard was something you only did during certain hours when security officers would be posted every 50 feet along the way in front of the DOT offices. I've been there several times since the stadium, and it's a developed area with restaurants, parks, and much of the public housing has been cleaned up and renewed.
I live about 90 minutes from Vegas. The sports teams (football, hockey) have a good local following and tourists treat the games like another show. I expect baseball to be the same. |
#70
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In Baltimore, the Ravens are hitting up the state for another $600 million for "improvements" to their stadium. https://www.baltimoresun.com/politic...cye-story.html. The state killed a major transit improvement project in Baltimore with massive federal matching $, which was designed to better connect low income neighborhoods to job centers in the city because of fears of cost overruns. But stadiums that are built for for-profit private businesses, there's always a way to find more public money. |
#71
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#72
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If you ask me John Fisher is doing a good job driving up the sale price of the club. Then let the new owners work out the money part.
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#73
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That money could have been spent on any number of other programs in Southwest/Navy Yard area. The neighborhood has certainly changed for the better in the past 15 years or so. But, was building a stadium the optimal solution? I don't know, but $1billion is a LOT of money by any measure. |
#74
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#75
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Why would Las Vegas want the A's anyway? Wait a few years and get an expansion team without the cheap, greedy, dysfunctional (I guess pick two) ownership. A's fan since '74 when my dad took my brother and I to opening day. These last few years, and this year especially, have been tough to watch. Last edited by donevwil; 04-24-2023 at 05:00 PM. |
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