City, county and RDA meetings are public. I don't have the time to provide that kind of research for you. The Bee had a great article a while back about the convention center and the subsidizing of the Hyatt by the city, but I can't find it with a cursory search.
I have worked in government financing for housing development for over 20 years, however. I'm not ignorant of what governments can do, when the motivation is there.
John Saca was set to get money from the city for the furnishings in the hotel portion of his condo towers. The Sheraton was constructed with the help of tax-exempt bond-financing provided by the city. Thomas is waiting for the city to come up with $500 million for infrastructure financing so he can develop the railyards. (Homeowners, on the other hand, are stuck with paying for the infrastructure improvements supporting the development of their homes almost all the time. (e.g., Mello-Roos, higher property taxes)
Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying it is always a bad thing for cities to offer financial incentives for construction/development or to lure businesses. Not at all. A government entity is just like a person. Some things you are going to have to pay for, if you really want it. You can drive a 20-year-old, inefficient, unsafe beater of a car and save money or you can break down and spend the bucks for a new, or newer, one (likely more fuel efficient, with all the latest safety features.) It costs money, tho.
Most affordable rental housing right now receives major funding from 10-year chunks of tax credits purchased by major corporate investors. A worthy cause, but the federal government is giving up major future revenue in return. It never shows up on the books, because it's money never received. The government has given out multi-billions in those tax credits. (You wouldn't believe the money lawyers, developers and tax syndicators are making out of these deals.)
Prop 13, the limit on property taxes has been a far greater boon to business and commercial landowners, than to homeowners in California.
The question isn't whether governments provide various forms of financial incentives to business and developers. The arguments arise over for what those incentives and funding should be provided. Certainly a valid point of public discourse. My only objection has been for so many people to act like any public financial contribution to a private business (arena) is an unheard of government action. Something that isn't done.
It is valid to discuss whether it should be provided and, if so, how much should be provided. To think other private interests, just like MSE do not benefit from government subsidized financing or government financial incentives is ridiculous. MSE is hardly the first private business to want help from local government for their business.
(I would also add that I think the NBA needs to look at this problem with their current business model, but that's a whole other subject.)
I have worked in government financing for housing development for over 20 years, however. I'm not ignorant of what governments can do, when the motivation is there.
John Saca was set to get money from the city for the furnishings in the hotel portion of his condo towers. The Sheraton was constructed with the help of tax-exempt bond-financing provided by the city. Thomas is waiting for the city to come up with $500 million for infrastructure financing so he can develop the railyards. (Homeowners, on the other hand, are stuck with paying for the infrastructure improvements supporting the development of their homes almost all the time. (e.g., Mello-Roos, higher property taxes)
Don't get me wrong. I'm not saying it is always a bad thing for cities to offer financial incentives for construction/development or to lure businesses. Not at all. A government entity is just like a person. Some things you are going to have to pay for, if you really want it. You can drive a 20-year-old, inefficient, unsafe beater of a car and save money or you can break down and spend the bucks for a new, or newer, one (likely more fuel efficient, with all the latest safety features.) It costs money, tho.
Most affordable rental housing right now receives major funding from 10-year chunks of tax credits purchased by major corporate investors. A worthy cause, but the federal government is giving up major future revenue in return. It never shows up on the books, because it's money never received. The government has given out multi-billions in those tax credits. (You wouldn't believe the money lawyers, developers and tax syndicators are making out of these deals.)
Prop 13, the limit on property taxes has been a far greater boon to business and commercial landowners, than to homeowners in California.
The question isn't whether governments provide various forms of financial incentives to business and developers. The arguments arise over for what those incentives and funding should be provided. Certainly a valid point of public discourse. My only objection has been for so many people to act like any public financial contribution to a private business (arena) is an unheard of government action. Something that isn't done.
It is valid to discuss whether it should be provided and, if so, how much should be provided. To think other private interests, just like MSE do not benefit from government subsidized financing or government financial incentives is ridiculous. MSE is hardly the first private business to want help from local government for their business.
(I would also add that I think the NBA needs to look at this problem with their current business model, but that's a whole other subject.)
Sure the city gave the Sheraton some money (13.4 million per the Sacramento business journal) but you have to realize that the revenues the city will realize from having the Sheraton here will far outweigh the cost of that subsidy. The tax exempt bond which was backed by the city had to be paid back (at least I'm 90% sure it did - sorry, research at midnight may not be the most effective way to go about proving my point).
Thomas and the railyards, again, you're looking at a quid pro quo situation in this circumstance. Sure the company will develop the railyards, but they'll receive a payment for services performed (I would need to look more into this to provide a more informed opinion).
Tax credits which allow individuals or corporations to keep more of their own money is not a subsidy in my opinion. The government, in general, attempts to affect private sector behavior with various incentives (which is a completely wrong and misguided effort, in my opinion). Again, "letting" corporations or individuals keep more of their own money is not the same as simply gifting public funds to private parties.
I would have no problem whatsoever with the city/county forgoing property taxes on any new arena project. The economic benefits derived from having the Kings in the area would far outweigh the lost tax revenues from just having the arena there.
I would have a problem with the City/county giving public funds to the Kings owners to help finance an arena the NBA could finance on their own. Those who do not utilize the services the Kings/NBA provide should not be forced to fund an arena they would not use. One thing is to provide $10,000,000 to purchase fixtures on a project that would generate around $1,600,000 of annual property taxes for the city (400 units in the towers, average price of $400,000 = 160,000,000 * 1 percent - city recoups its investment in a few short years just from the property taxes, let alone other economic benefits), another thing is to give hundreds of millions of dollars to a private enterprise that could theoretically fund its own construction. What could they do - half all salaries in the league, save the money, maintain a sinking fund, and draw upon it when a team wants a new arena - Would that happen? Of course not, but the way the NBA does business just stinks, in my opinion.
I, as a fan and user of the services the Kings provide, wouldn't mind paying extra to help fund any type of project; put a surcharge on the tickets for starters, charge a buck extra for each soda/beer, etc. Let us know what it is for, etc. However, the type of funding the NBA is asking for shouldn't be the public's responsibility to provide.