• About Us
  • Activity
  • Advertising
  • Books
  • Business
  • Contact
  • Dashboard
  • EB5
  • Entertainment
  • feedback
  • Forgot Your Password?
  • Government
  • Home
  • Home 20723
  • Interviews
  • Login
  • Members
  • Meme generator
  • National
  • Nevada
  • Nevada News and Views
  • Newsmax
  • NN&V Ads
  • Opinion
  • Pick a New Password
  • Politics
  • Polls
  • Privacy Policy
  • Profile
  • Recent comments by me
  • Recent comments on my posts
  • Register
  • Submit post
  • Subscribe
  • Subscription Confirmation
  • Survey
  • Survey
  • Terms of Service
  • Today’s Top 10
  • Travel
  • Travel
  • Travel
  • Welcome!
  • Yop Poll Archive
Nevada News and Views
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • More
    • Opinion
  • Facebook

  • Twitter

  • Pinterest

  • RSS

Featured Article

Deal to give Athletics $380M to move to Las Vegas passes Nevada Legislature

Deal to give Athletics $380M to move to Las Vegas passes Nevada Legislature
The Center Square
June 14, 2023

A person, reflected in glass, walks near the Tropicana Las Vegas, Tuesday, May 16, 2023, in Las Vegas. Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo announced Wednesday, May 24, 2023, a tentative agreement between his office, legislative leaders in the state and the Oakland Athletics for a baseball stadium funding plan after weeks of negotiations over how much public assistance the state will contribute to a $1.5 billion ballpark in Las Vegas, according to a joint statement. The bill comes on the heels of the Athletics’ purchase of land on the southern end of the Las Vegas Strip where the Tropicana Las Vegas casino resort sits.
AP Photo/John Locher

(Jon Styf) – The Nevada Legislature finished its special session by approving a $380 million tax bill to attempt to bring the Oakland Athletics to Las Vegas.

The Assembly passed an amended bill, 25-15, on Wednesday night before the changes were approved by the Senate.

The largest change in the deal Wednesday was a guarantee that the Athletics would put $2 million annually into a community benefits agreement after a 30,000-seat retractable roof stadium opened in 2028.

The bill includes a tax capture at the complex expected not only to pay off up to $175 million in bonds but also to fund future capital projects at the stadium, which will be required by a “first-class” clause in a 30-year lease the Athletics plan to sign.

The bill also requires the stadium to be built on the Tropicana site.

The stadium tax capture will collect all sales, payroll, insurance, gross revenue, ticket and liquor taxes at the nine-acre site – planned to be built at the corner of Las Vegas Boulevard and Tropicana Avenue on the site of the current Tropicana Las Vegas Casino Resort – along with transportation taxes on trips to and from the complex. The Athletics will be able to sell stadium naming rights and keep those funds.

The Senate passed the bill on Tuesday. Now it will head to the desk of Gov. Joe Lombardo, who called the special session to get the Athletics deal passed.

A large part of the pitch from bill proponents, like Jeremy Aguero of Las Vegas-based Applied Analysis, was the claimed economic impact of professional sports in Las Vegas.

Economist E. Frank Stephenson of Berry College in Georgia looked at the impact on hotel data for four years between October 2015 and September 2019, finding that there was no statistical impact showing an increase in room rentals, average daily rate or hotel revenue associated with either Aces or Knights games.

He didn’t look at Raiders hotel impact because COVID-19 would make the data not worthwhile.

“Baseball season runs April to Sept and those are 6 of the 8 highest occupancy months in LV,” Stephenson wrote. “I’d expect a lot of displacement if the A’s do actually attract tourists to LV.”


By

Jon Styf | The Center Square

Prev postNext post

Related ItemsFeatured Article
Featured Article
June 14, 2023
The Center Square

Related ItemsFeatured Article

More in Featured Article

More Bad Press for Nevada GOP’s “Chaos Caucus”

Chuck MuthOctober 1, 2023
Read More

About Last Night: GOP Prez Debate #2

Chuck MuthSeptember 28, 2023
Read More

California leads 20 states to stop Indiana ban on gender-change drugs for minors

The Center SquareSeptember 28, 2023
Read More

Sen. Rosen: Menendez should resign following bribery charges

The Center SquareSeptember 27, 2023
Read More

What You Can Do to Stop the Looming GOP Civil War

Chuck MuthSeptember 26, 2023
Read More

Viguerie at 90: Still Marching Toward the Sound of the Cannons

Chuck MuthSeptember 25, 2023
Read More
Scroll for more
Tap

Subscribe Free By Email

Looking for the best in breaking news and conservative views? Let Chuck do all the work for you! Subscribe to his FREE "Muth's Truths" e-newsletter.

* indicates required
Nevada News and Views
Nevada News & Views is an educational project of Citizen Outreach Foundation, a non-partisan IRS-approved 501(c)(3) organization. It is not associated or affiliated with any political party or group. Nevada News & Views is accessible by the public at no cost. It funds its operations through tax-deductible contributions from donors and supporters and does not accept government money or grants.

TAGS

Featured Article Muths truth

Copyright © 2023 Citizen Outreach | Maintained by VirtualAlly

2023 Nevada Legislature: Winners & Losers, Part VI
2023 Nevada Legislature: Winners & Losers, Part VII