Bee: Better arena deal: Let Kings play for free

VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
#1
And, once again, Daniel Weintraub puts SOME of the facts out there without regard for the rest of the story. And the Bee will hide behind the "He's a columnist; he can say what he likes" response if called on it...
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http://www.sacbee.com/content/politics/columns/weintraub/story/14284043p-15091637c.html
Daniel Weintraub: A better arena deal: Let the Kings play for free
By Daniel Weintraub -- Bee Columnist
Published 12:01 am PDT Tuesday, August 1, 2006


The Sacramento County Board of Supervisors is expected to vote today to ask county residents to raise the sales tax to build a new downtown arena for the Sacramento Kings. The team's owners would pay an average of $4 million a year in rent over 30 years and, in exchange, would keep all the profits that the arena generates.

Instead of charging the Kings rent, however, it would be a better deal for the taxpayers to build the arena, run it under public management and let the team play there for free.

But the Kings would almost certainly turn down such an offer. They don't want to play in Sacramento for free. They want us to pay them to play here.

That's what this deal amounts to. The owners of the Kings -- the Maloof family -- could end up clearing millions in profit from our arena over the life of the agreement, even before they count their profits from running the team.

Although the promoters of the agreement have characterized the Maloofs' rent payments as a contribution to the arena construction costs, that's not really an accurate way to evaluate the deal. The public would pay the entire cost of construction, using about half the proceeds from a quarter-cent sales tax increase over 15 years, or about $600 million.

The Maloofs would deposit $20 million into an account for future maintenance and repairs on the building, and pay rent beginning at $3 million in the first year and increasing 2 percent a year.

So why would it be a better deal for the taxpayers to let the team play there rent-free? Because under the terms of this deal, the Maloofs get to keep every penny of revenue from the arena, including rent charged to other users, concessions, parking, advertising and the lucrative naming rights.

A study performed three years ago for the city estimated that a new arena would generate about $1 million in profits in the first year, increasing at 5 percent a year. The naming rights, the study guessed at the time, would fetch another $2 million a year.

It doesn't take a math whiz to see what's going on here. The negotiators who framed this deal set the Kings' rent to match what the Maloofs would take in from running the arena and selling the naming rights. It's a wash. The Maloofs' "rent" would be covered by the money they make off an arena we build.

But those projections were based on very conservative assumptions, the study's authors said at the time.

And city and county leaders now say they expect the arena to host 200 events a year -- 25 percent more than the 160 upon which the study's profit estimates were based.

That would be worth about $250,000 a year more in profits at the beginning of the deal, and $21 million over the life of the agreement, assuming the same 5 percent annual inflation used by the authors of the study.

Other assumptions in the study might also be out of date. The naming rights could easily go for more than $2 million a year. FedEx paid more than twice that to put its name on a new arena in Memphis. And parking in the structure next to the arena could go for more than $10 a car. The Golden State Warriors charge $15 to park at their games in Oakland.

If the Kings got $3 million per year for the naming rights and charged $15 for parking, they would instantly double their income from the arena, compared to what the study projected. Over 30 years, the money would amount to more than $200 million.

So, under the most conservative scenario, management of the arena is a break-even proposition for the Maloofs, assuming they would pay about $122 million in rent over that period. That means their "contribution" to the entire $600 million project would be the capital repair fund of $20 million they would set aside, an expense they are already bearing at their own arena -- Arco -- today.

The second scenario, assuming 200 events a year, a more lucrative naming deal and more expensive parking, makes the deal a $115 million windfall for the Maloofs -- after they pay us rent with the money they make from our arena. Even if you consider that money will be worth less in the future than it is today, and you deduct the $20 million the Kings will put into a repair fund, they would still be clearing about $50 million in today's dollars.

And none of this even considers the additional money they stand to make off their ownership of their main Sacramento business, the basketball team.

It's one thing for the public to build an arena with taxpayer dollars. It's another to build that arena and then hand the keys to a private party to profit from it.

If this is an asset the community wants and needs, it would be better to build it and manage it ourselves. Even if we let the Kings play there for free.

About the writer: The Bee's Daniel Weintraub can be reached at (916) 321-1914 or at dweintraub@sacbee.com.
 

VF21

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SME
#2
Weintraub hasn't addressed the rising costs the Maloofs absorb by paying ALL the operating expenses of the arena. But he won't, because that wouldn't fit into his nicely little laid out piece.

The "Maloofs COULD make millions in profits from our arena over the lifetime of the agreement"?

Oh, NO! How dare businessmen strike a deal that benefits all parties? How could the Maloofs even think of potentially making a little money? Shame on them!!!

This is just ludicrous. The area will benefit from the arena, over and above the direct income. AND the Maloofs are absorbing ALL the costs. If things don't go well, they're still paying a hefty lease payment for 30 years and all the city/county has to do to the building is sit back and collect the rent.
 

Warhawk

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#4
He also ignores that due to the proximity to light rail and downtown, the amount of cars actually paying the parking fees would likely be a lot less than currently do.

He does not account for inflation in wages and goods required to operate the arena and maintain it.

He ignores the fact that while in the existing arena, the Kings have lost millions of $$$ most years or barely broke even or ahead in most of the rest since the Maloofs took over (edit - see below). Now they stand to actually make some money and all of a sudden the sky is falling.

Edit: Look here:

http://cbs.sportsline.com/general/story/6408583

Thankfully, most owners seem to look at the long-term. Sacramento Kings co-owner Joe Maloof looks at his $5 million-$9 million fiscal year loss this way:

"When you're trying to build the asset value of your franchise, it is more important to look at a five- to 10-year plan, rather than their profit and loss every year."


As the NBA continues to stabilize and grow, more of its owners will look at the business from this perspective.
 
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VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
#5
The Bee COULD do all parties involved a big service if they presented the facts clearly, without bias, and let the readers decide this important issue for themselves. They COULD even provide a service with pieces like this, if they addressed the whole picture instead of picking out the pieces that fit their agenda.

They could do those things. Instead, we are treated time and time again to opinion pieces that blatantly distort reality.

I'm hoping perhaps the Sacramento Business Journal will put out some articles. I may not always agree with them, but they certainly seem to have a little better commitment to presenting facts and letting the readers decide for themselves.

IMHO the worst day in Sacramento history for anyone wanting or hoping for an unbiased media was the day the Sacramento Union finally closed up shop.
 

Warhawk

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#6
The second scenario, assuming 200 events a year, a more lucrative naming deal and more expensive parking, makes the deal a $115 million windfall for the Maloofs -- after they pay us rent with the money they make from our arena. Even if you consider that money will be worth less in the future than it is today, and you deduct the $20 million the Kings will put into a repair fund, they would still be clearing about $50 million in today's dollars.
And the new tax is going to dump at least 12 times that amount into city/county coffers over 15 years, not the 30 the Maloofs will be operating the facility.
 

Warhawk

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Staff member
#7
I sent him an e-mail:


Mr. Weintraub-

I understand that you feel that the Maloofs are rolling in the dough from operating the Kings since you included this in your article:

"The owners of the Kings -- the Maloof family -- could end up clearing millions in profit from our arena over the life of the agreement, even before they count their profits from running the team."

Did you not read the articles published by your paper over the years detailing the millions of dollars in losses the Maloofs have incurred in owning the Kings and keeping them here where they have the support of the best fans in the NBA?

How about this tidbit:

http://cbs.sportsline.com/general/story/6408583

Thankfully, most owners seem to look at the long-term. Sacramento Kings co-owner Joe Maloof looks at his $5 million-$9 million fiscal year loss this way:

"When you're trying to build the asset value of your franchise, it is more important to look at a five- to 10-year plan, rather than their profit and loss every year."


I have no problem paying a small tax to construct a new arena and help revitalize the northern downtown area, not to mention all the other projects in outlying areas that will benefit the entire county. I don't mind the Maloofs making a profit - if there wasn't some profit to be made, the team would soon be long gone, especially given the large losses they have sustained over the years.

It seems like nobody at the Sacramento Bee (other than Voison and sometimes Breton) can understand the passion and pride most of the people in the area take from having the Kings in Sacramento or the immense public benefit they bring in income, taxes, and exposure throughout the world.

I recently bought a new truck in Sacramento (I live in Elk Grove). This new tax would have cost me $53.72 in additional taxes. I wouldn't have even noticed it on a purchase that large.

You neglect to mention they are going to be responsible for all the operating expenses as well, implying that they have no risk in this venture. You neglect to mention that due to the proximity to light rail, train transportation, and the downtown area and other available parking that they are likely to see a significant drop in parking fees paid for events. And the idea that a public agency could ever run a facility like ARCO nearly as efficiently or book as many quality events (heck, as many events, period) is almost laughable. You said it yourself - "And city and county leaders now say they expect the arena to host 200 events a year -- 25 percent more than the 160 upon which the study's profit estimates were based."

You also state that "Even if you consider that money will be worth less in the future than it is today, and you deduct the $20 million the Kings will put into a repair fund, they would still be clearing about $50 million in today's dollars."

$50 million. Over 30 years. Did you look at the tax income the cities and county will receive over the next 15 years after arena construction is complete? About 12 times that - as a minimum. In half the time.

Thanks for your attention-
xxx


Let's see if I get a response.
 
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VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
#8
I think you'll get a response. I'm just interested in seeing how closely it resembles the other responses you've received.

;)
 

VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
#10
I checked their website and there are a couple of articles, but they're available for PAID print subscribers only. It appears one of them may be addressing the very "education points" we've been discussing in another thread. I hope so...since this is the information people need to get.

Interestingly enough - or not - the writer of an article on July 20 is listed as ADAM Weintraub. That's an unusual enough name that I have to wonder if he's related.

Since viewing those articles requires a PAID subscription and not just a site registration, we won't be able to share them here.
 
#11
What I don't understand is why the Bee claims to be your #1 source for news and information regarding the Kings and the NBA, but all they seem to be doing lately is pushing an negative agenda regarding the Kings recent moves and the arena deal! What gives?
 

VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
#12
They're the #1 source for news and information because they're the ONLY large daily in the area. Their last real competition, the Sacramento Union, went out of business years ago.

The Bee, for a very long time, has been accused by many of only printing one side of issues - the side THEY agree with.
 
#13
They're the #1 source for news and information because they're the ONLY large daily in the area. Their last real competition, the Sacramento Union, went out of business years ago.

The Bee, for a very long time, has been accused by many of only printing one side of issues - the side THEY agree with.

hmm... I heard that the Bee BOUGHT them out. I miss the Union.

Just for the fun of it, I googled it and found this. :eek: http://www.sacunion.com/
 
#14
My email to Mr. Weintraub:

Mr Weintraub,
I assume your column went to the extreme to make a point that it would be better for the city to structure the deal so that they are the owner and operator. Can we assume that this was a point of negotiation and obviously didn't fly? So if this didn't result from the talks, than why are you basing an entire article on fantasy? I would certainly assume that the Maloofs would not accept such terms and that leaves us where? It leaves us back in 1983 with no team and no building. Would it be preferrable to you that the city lets the Maloofs take the team out of town, watch Arco be torn down and the land sold off. Then have the city set about putting together your version of the deal without any NBA ownership and trying to sell this deal to another NBA team and hope they like it better than the Maloofs?
Again, pure fantasy that doesn't work.
JB
 

VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
#15
hmm... I heard that the Bee BOUGHT them out. I miss the Union.

Just for the fun of it, I googled it and found this. :eek: http://www.sacunion.com/
No, the Bee didn't buy out the Union. They didn't have to. They were able to slowly but surely drive them out of business. The Union was one of the last conservative dailies in California and it just couldn't survive against the liberal policies of the Bee, especially in a town like Sacramento.

Here's what wikipedia has to say:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacramento_Union

The Sacramento Union was a newspaper founded in 1851 in Sacramento, California. It was the oldest daily newspaper west of the Mississippi before it closed its doors after 143 years in January 1994, no longer able to compete with The Sacramento Bee, which was founded just six years after the Union, in 1857. The archives of the Union are in the Special Collections of the Shields Library of UC Davis.
Writer and journalist Mark Twain worked at the Union in 1866.

The Union was owned by Copley Newspapers in the 1960s. Conservative financier Richard Mellon Scaife owned the newspaper from 1977 to 1989. Scaife sold the Union to local real estate developers Daniel Benvenuti Jr. and David Kassis. They hired Joseph Farah as editor, and the paper went into a more conservative direction. According to a former reporter, Farah issued memos prohibiting reporters from using the words "gay," assault rifles," and "women's health center"; these were replaced by "homosexual," semi-automatic rifles," and "abortion clinics." Farah resigned as editor 15 months later; under his editorship, the paper's circulation declined nearly 30 percent, from 72,000 to 52,000. Farah later founded the website WorldNetDaily.

Printer Ralph Danel Jr. bought the Union from Benvenuti and Kassis in November 1992. In an attempt to reduce losses, circulation was dropped outside of the Sacramento metro area and, two months before its closure, publication was changed from seven days a week to three days a week. The Union published its final edition on January 14, 1994.

In late 2004, a modernized Sacramento Union returned with bimonthly magazines, then started publishing monthly in May 2005. James H. Smith, a former publisher of the Sacramento Union newspaper and co-founder of the Western Journalism Center with Farah, served as publisher, and Kenneth E. Grubbs Jr., former director of the National Journalism Center, served as editor. The publishers did not intend to return as a print daily newspaper, concentrating instead on web and magazine publishing. The magazine folded after only a few issues, though the Sacramento Union continues to publish solely on the web. Much of the office staff was laid off in May 2005. Smith and Grubbs were ousted in June 2005, and J.J. McClatchy, a member of the Union's board of directors, was named general manager. Smith accused McClatchy of staging a hostile takeover of the Union on behalf of his family, which owns The Sacramento Bee.

In the autumn of 2005, demolition crews started work on the old Union office building, located at 301 Capitol Mall in downtown Sacramento. Once it is fully demolished, a future 53-story high-rise called "The Towers on Capitol Mall" will begin construction in the Union's previous spot. It will consist of two separate mixed-use buildings which feature luxury apartment and hotel suites.
The Sacramento Union was a proud newspaper with a great tradition. It was killed by both the Bee and incompetence, and not necessarily in that order.

I think the use of its name for a web bizarro-type clone is deplorable.
 
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#16
They're the #1 source for news and information because they're the ONLY large daily in the area. Their last real competition, the Sacramento Union, went out of business years ago.

The Bee, for a very long time, has been accused by many of only printing one side of issues - the side THEY agree with.
But alas' - there was the creation of the internet (thanks to Al Gore). Now I do not have to waste my time with this kind of poppycock. Who the He** cares what these guys write or think. I would not let some guy throw a free copy of the Bee on my doorstep because it would just clutter the recycle bin. Instead, I will just continue to receive better information off the information super highway.;)
 

VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
#17
That's your choice, of course. I still think there is value to a print newspaper. Of course, I also think there's value to REAL books, too.

The fact is, regardless of your preference, a LOT of people still turn to the Bee for information. It is those people the proponents of the "quality of life" ballot measure are going to have to consider in their advertising.

That's one of the reasons this forum exists.
 
#18
It seems to me that all Weintraub is saying is that it would have been a better deal for taxpayers to take a cut of arena revenues than to take a set amount in rent payments. His assumptions seem reasonable to me and I think he's probably right. Local government getting a cut of arena revenue was one of my personal requirements going in to this deal. I'm not saying I'm against it - in fact, I'm still deciding.

But I don't have to be against the deal to admit that Weintraub makes a good point. Having said that, his point is moot. We've got the deal we've got, and voters are either going to approve it or the Kings are going to move.
 

Warhawk

Give blood and save a life!
Staff member
#19
I still think there is value to a print newspaper. Of course, I also think there's value to REAL books, too.
I get the Bee because there really is no other option in the area. I like having a paper in my hand before/after sitting in an office all day in fromt of a computer. It all gets recycled. My wife and I can sit on the couch and read it together (different sections at a time, obviously). It's easy to take with you in the car (or anywhere else) and read if someone else drives. When I am out on a project site in the middle of nowhere and the drill rig breaks down I have something to do. Having all the local advertisements in one place for easy comparison is nice as well.

Eh, I'm a reader. I like paper. :D
 
#21
We've got the deal we've got, and voters are either going to approve it or the Kings are going to move.
...and this is the real deal. All of the armchair QB's are sure that they could have struck a better deal with Maloofs because they are clearly more intelligent than RD. :rolleyes: However, this is the deal - take-it or leave it. If you vote "no" realize the ramifications. If you vote "yes" realize that your investment in the city is $3-4/month. Could somebody in the Bee write that, because it is really that simple.
 
#22
I think the beginning of the end was when the Bee moved from an weekday afternoon paper to a morning paper in the early 70's and went head to head with the Union. Back then people were basing subscription loyalty more on when the paper showed up on their doorstep more than conservative vs. liberal. A lot of people took both papers before that.
 
#23
No, the Bee didn't buy out the Union. They didn't have to. They were able to slowly but surely drive them out of business. The Union was one of the last conservative dailies in California and it just couldn't survive against the liberal policies of the Bee, especially in a town like Sacramento.

Here's what wikipedia has to say:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacramento_Union



The Sacramento Union was a proud newspaper with a great tradition. It was killed by both the Bee and incompetence, and not necessarily in that order.

I think the use of its name for a web bizarro-type clone is deplorable.
interesting....hey didn't there also used to be a Grass Valley Union? Is that still around?
 
#24
What a concept....a business leases space from a landlord and actuallyl expects to make a profit over 30 years! And MSE isn't guaranteed to run a profit. However, the city is guaranteed to get their rent.

If the city wants a share of the revenues, then it would have to accept an equal share of any costs and/or potential losses. In this deal, the city collects rent period. Any cost and any losses are the sole responsibility of MSE.

Not only that, but the Maloofs have to immeidatley pay of the $80 some million 0utstanding on the current loan, instead of paying it off in cheaper dollars over the remaining term of the loan (I think about 20 years).

To me an opinion columnist is just that, stating opinions. To me, Weintraub steps over that line the minute he starts selectively spewing facts and figures. If he wants to start using facts and figures, then he should present them all. If he doesn't, he isn't opining, he's distorting reality.

I wish we could get an article from someone outside Sacramento, with no agenda, that dispassionately presents the pros and cons and also compares the deal to cities who have built arenas with an NBA team or without any pro sports team. Fat chance, I'm afraid.
 
#25
Someone on 1140 just brought up a good point. The Bee is owned by The McClatchy Company. One of their board of directors is one Kevin S. McClatchy. The same Kevin McClatchy who is the managing general partner of the Pittsburg Pirates. The same MLB baseball team that held that city to the fire to build a new stadium. Here is the dirt on how that facility got built:
http://www.post-gazette.com/pirates/20010415pncbuildtext9.asp
Now that is a story of some dirty politics!
I guess Kevin McClatchy had no problem playing the role of the Maloofs but somehow his newspaper has different standards?
 

VF21

Super Moderator Emeritus
SME
#26
To me an opinion columnist is just that, stating opinions. To me, Weintraub steps over that line the minute he starts selectively spewing facts and figures. If he wants to start using facts and figures, then he should present them all. If he doesn't, he isn't opining, he's distorting reality.
Excellent point, and one I wish the Bee editors would consider once in a while. Letting these "articles" hide behind the misnomer "opinion column" is, IMHO, a breach of ethics.

I wish we could get an article from someone outside Sacramento, with no agenda, that dispassionately presents the pros and cons and also compares the deal to cities who have built arenas with an NBA team or without any pro sports team. Fat chance, I'm afraid.
I would love to see this, too.
 
#30
Someone on 1140 just brought up a good point. The Bee is owned by The McClatchy Company. One of their board of directors is one Kevin S. McClatchy. The same Kevin McClatchy who is the managing general partner of the Pittsburg Pirates. The same MLB baseball team that held that city to the fire to build a new stadium. Here is the dirt on how that facility got built:
http://www.post-gazette.com/pirates/20010415pncbuildtext9.asp
Now that is a story of some dirty politics!
I guess Kevin McClatchy had no problem playing the role of the Maloofs but somehow his newspaper has different standards?
Here is another link to the fianancing breakdown of the project. I am kind of slow....could somebody tell me how much McClatchy contributed.

http://www.ballparks.com/baseball/index.htm