I've always worried about Vegas IF they get the arena. Otherwise, they're an absolute no go. I'm just confused about how this will go about. The article says...
"In the next session, legislators must act on the bill in 40 days. Otherwise, the proposed tax will go to voters in the 2012 general election."
I'm confused. Does this mean legislators can push this through without a voter referendum if they take care of business in the next 40 days or does it mean that they need to act quickly in order to get it to voters this year? I only ask because if it goes to the voters, they don't have a prayer. If they can push it through without a referendum and it breaks ground, then we're in trouble.
That's the way Nevada state law works. I read about it long ago, but basically, they need 10% of registered voters on three petitions, each representing a US Congressional district.
Once they complete that requirement, it goes to the State Legislature, who can either pass the proposal, or send it on to the voters. They can't just reject it entirely; a vote against the proposal goes to the public.
It won't get that far. Just look at who's behind this: Harrah's. There will be a huge lobbying effort here.
MGM is opposing it, but there is so much room for a compromise here -- "We'll let you have it rent-free for 10 nights a year." -- that they won't oppose it for very long. Once you get nothing but favorable pressure from the big lobbies, you could be looking at close to a unanimous vote.
I'm reading the comments on lvrj, too. They sound an awful lot like the comments we used to read on sacbee. Sacbee's commenting system is dead, so you'll have to rely on your memory on this one. "This is terrible." "This is awful." "If it was such a great idea, a private company would have done it by now." Still waiting for, "But it's not just about basketball; think of the children!". It's coming; you know it is.
This is a pretty scary 85 (or so) day period coming up for the future of the Kings in Sacramento. A huge part of the equation is not in our control, and is happening hundreds of miles away. Depending on the proposal, I'd have to think the Maloofs are interested. I'm not sure if the Palms would be one of the taxed properties -- the proposal is for 3 miles of the Vegas strip, and I don't know if the Palms is one of those. But we have...
Palms hurting; Kings are deeply in debt; a bad arena situation; the naming-rights going away (these are now very hard to get, by the way); flagging attendance (we're number 30!); and a State that is now at least 2 steps ahead of us in the arena game.
I think our odds are now very long.
If the Maloofs start lobbying for this arena and this tax, well, Dandy Don's Ghost is singing that song.