Cleveland Will Be Paying for Renovations to King James' Castle Until 2034
Long after Lebron James and the 2016 NBA championship are a distant memory.

Led by one of the game's all-time greatest players and just four wins away from back-to-back league championships, there's no doubt that the Cleveland Cavaliers are basketball royalty.
Taxpayers in northern Ohio—thrilled though they might be about the team's on-court exploits—might find themselves feeling more like peasants, the kind who get yoked into service for a $140 million renovation of "King" (Lebron) James' castle. After the Cavs broke a 52-year championship drought by rallying to defeat the Golden State Warriors in last year's National Basketball Association championship series (a rematch of which begins this week), team owner Dan Gilbert wasted little time in turning that goodwill into political capital, locking taxpayers into a stadium deal that they will be paying off long after James' career and the 2016 championship team are a hazy memory.
Last month, Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson signed off on the city's deal to renovate Quicken Loans Arena, where the Cavaliers play. Though the project carries a $140 million price tag that supposedly is split evenly between the team and the taxpayers, the final cost will end up being almost twice that total.
As Cleveland.com explains, Cuyahoga County will borrow the $140 million upfront by issuing bonds, but paying off those loans will take until 2034 and will end up costing an estimated $244 million. The city is piggybacking an extra $38.5 million into the bonds to pay for future sports stadium projects, bringing the final total to more than $282 million, paid over 17 years.
While the Cavs will pay $122 million of the total, Cleveland will pay $132 million through a combination of higher taxes on tickets to events at the arena and hotel tax revenue. Another $16 million will come from the county, and the final $12 million comes from higher taxes on tickets to "future Cavs playoff games" and an increased sales tax on merchandise, food, and alcohol sold at the arena.
As stadium financing deals go, this is far from the worst one out there. Most of the new taxes will apply only to people who go to games and other events at Quicken Loans Arena, which is better than asking the general public to foot the bill. Sure, your ticket will cost most and your beer and popcorn will be marked up to an even more unbelievable level, but you will have opted in to paying those higher fees by going to the arena.
Still, it's hard to understand why the city feels the need to lavish corporate welfare on a team that's currently in the midst of an unparalleled run of success both on the court and in the board room. After winning the first championship in team history last year, the Cavs' are estimated to be worth $1.3 billion, according to Forbes' Magazine. That makes them the 11th most valuable team in the NBA, which is no small feat, considering the top 10 teams hail from much larger markets, like Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, and Houston.
Surely the Cavs—and Gilbert, the owner, who bought the team in 2005 for $375 million, about a quarter of what it's worth today—could have afforded to pay a larger share of the renovations, had city and county officials pushed for that.
Celebrate now, Cleveland. Back-to-back-to-back trips to the NBA Finals don't happen too often. Bask in the glory of James' transcendent abilities as the game's top superstar while you've got him. The bill will be coming due for years to come.
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Cucktown
I love when everyone projects their politics on some crazy asshole. So idiotic.
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You'd think these sports contracts wouldn't be guaranteed money, they'd have performance clauses attached like every other sports contract. $140 million over 17 years is $10 mil up front, the rest is pro-rated according to how many games you win, how many tickets you sell, what the TV ratings are, how much revenue you generate, etc. You suck ass, you pay for your own damn arena.
"I'll take my team and move"
To which the answer is "Don't let the door hit you on the way out." Pity so few politicians have the spine to use it.
Since this is essentially raising ticket and concession prices to pay for the government half of the renovation I don't understand how it is different than the Cavs just raising prices themselves and paying for the whole thing themselves.
I didn't go into this in the piece, because its just speculation on my part, but I think the big difference is that the city wouldn't be able to piggyback an additional $38.5 million in bonds if the team was doing it all themselves.
You must be new here. I see no link to Drew Carey's pieces on fixing Cleveland's finances.
For shame 🙂
Reason Saves Cleveland
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I also imagine that if the attendees revolt and don't pay the higher costs, the general taxpayers are on the hook for it.
The 9ers did a deal to get the new stadium in Santa Clara, the 9ers went in the tank, the attendance dropped like a rock and the Santa Clara taxpayers are taking it in the shorts.
Politicians learn economics where global warming fanatics learn modeling.
"If I wish hard enough, that should be enough to make it true."
OT:
"Merkel Says Europe Must Take Fate Into Own Hands"
[...]
"MUNICH ? Europe can no longer completely rely on its allies, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Sunday, pointing to bruising meetings of G7 wealthy nations and NATO last week."
http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/.....&ocid=iehp
First, notice the plural. I guess Tonga has decided to stop propping up socialist governments too, right? Or was it Argentina?
Secondly, screw you, Merkel. You've been "completely relying" on the US taxpayer for 70 years! We've been covering your defense bill so you and the Euros in general can finance 4-week vacations and 30-hour work weeks.
Time to grow up, don't you think?
More OT:
Reason, if you used some of the money you've gotten from me over the years for a decent server, like one that doesn't jump around an leave me clicking on an ad in which I have no interest, you might get $1.00 this year. As it is, you can forget it.
Further OT:
"2017 BMW 5 series Production in China "
[...]
"A key component of the Shenyang location is the engine plant with light-metal foundry ? the BMW Group's only engine production facility outside Europe. The engine plant supplies the two vehicle production sites in Dadong and Tiexi with drive units for locally-produced BMW automobiles. A new high-voltage battery centre, which will assemble high-voltage batteries for plug-in hybrid vehicles, is currently under construction."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFpYw0fmDsA
There's a lot of argle-bargle about 'local markets' but keep in mind the German voters have decided to return to 18th-century energy production, and similarly, they are not likely to allow battery assembly with KEMIKULZ! It's 'un-natural!'
As a result, any German corporation involved in manufacturing that isn't scrambling to find countries with reliable energy supplies ought to be sued by the stock holders.
It's easy to argue that German 'romanticism' gave rise to Nazism, and it's not hard to imagine that it will lead to something equally harmful, if less murderous.
Quite the opposite: much of modern German politics is motivated by a neurotic fear of their own past and a compulsive need to do what they think is the opposite of what the Nazis would do. It's why they cling so hard to the Euro. It's a big reason why they don't want to be responsible for their own defense. Collective guilt is the dominant theme in their politics.
I also imagine that if the attendees revolt and don't pay the higher costs, the general taxpayers are on the hook for it.
The 9ers did a deal to get the new stadium in Santa Clara, the 9ers went in the tank, the attendance dropped like a rock and the Santa Clara taxpayers are taking it in the shorts.
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