Voters Put Arizona Coyotes' Arena Project on Ice
A good example of why so few stadium deals end up on the ballot.

Voters cross-checked a proposed new stadium for the National Hockey League's Arizona Coyotes on Tuesday, rejecting all three ballot measures connected to the $2.1 billion development scheme.
Tempe, Arizona, residents had been asked whether they'd approve of an arena deal that included about 2,000 apartments and several commercial properties. The Tempe City Council had given preliminary approval for the project earlier this year but wisely handed off the final decision to the electorate. Though ballots are still being counted, the tallied results show an apparent defeat for the project, and the team's owner has conceded defeat, reports The Arizona Republic.
Tuesday's results might finally ice the years-long effort to build the Coyotes yet another taxpayer-funded stadium in the Phoenix area. The team arrived from Winnipeg, Manitoba, in 1996 and took up residence in the America West Arena (now known as the Talking Stick Resort Arena), which the city of Phoenix built in 1990 for $90 million for its professional basketball team, the Phoenix Suns. A few years later, the team and the NHL convinced the nearby city of Glendale, Arizona, to put up $155 million in bonds to build a new arena for the team. The Coyotes moved there in December 2003.
Glendale's experience with the Coyotes was not a pleasant one. After the Coyotes' previous owner put the team into bankruptcy in 2009, Glendale ended up paying the NHL $50 million over two years to keep the team from relocating. During that same period, the city had to lay off city workers, cut services, and raise taxes to close annual budget gaps. A new owner signed a 15-year lease with the city in 2013, but the city council voided that agreement in 2015, leaving the team without a permanent home. After the 2022 season, Glendale unceremoniously evicted the Coyotes, who played the current season in a 5,000-seat arena at Arizona State University.
Team owner Alex Meruelo and the NHL have spent the past few years trying to convince Tempe to finance a new arena for the team. The plan that eventually made it before voters would have cost the public $750 million in tax breaks and deferments. Meruelo backed the campaign for the arena with nearly $700,000 from his company. He also sent a cease-and-desist letter to arena opponents, demanding they stop calling him "corrupt" in campaign ads.
The fact that the opponents of the arena project prevailed despite being wildly outspent—by a margin of 35-1, according to the Republic—shows that voters generally think team owners ought to pay for their sporting palaces. The Tempe project came with all the usual promises about economic growth and new jobs, but people are wising up to the fact that those projections are consistently inaccurate. That's especially true when a team is trying to shift from one part of the Phoenix metro area to another—any "economic growth" generated by the new stadium in Tempe would have been merely redirected from Glendale.
The result also serves as a good reminder about why so few stadium projects go before voters. "Team owners would much rather deal directly with elected officials, who can be more easily, uh, let's go with 'influenced' by dropping a bunch of cash on lobbyists," writes stadium subsidy critic Neil deMause on his Field of Schemes blog.
With the Tempe deal frozen by voters, the future of the Coyotes is very much in doubt. The NHL understandably wants a team in the Phoenix region—one of the biggest media markets in the U.S.—but not enough to ask Meruelo to pay for his own damn stadium.
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It would be a shame if hockey disappeared from Arizona, there's such a long tradition of ice sports in Arizona. I know when I think of Arizona, I think of hockey.
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Just think of all the Bud Lite that won't be imbibed in.
Sad to see such a long tradition of hockey in Arizona fade away.
Do coyotes wear two or four skates when they play ?
"The plan that eventually made it before voters would have cost the public $750 million in tax breaks and deferments. Meruelo backed the campaign for the arena with nearly $700,000 from his company.”
Now that’s what I call having significant skin in the game.
And a good example of how even when stadium deals DO end up on the ballot, public officials say "fuck you" and build them anyway.
Why did they build it anyway? Because technically the voters voted for the funding mechanism, not the stadium itself... so that allowed Seattle to build the stadium anyway, but just roll it into the general budget and then you got a tax increase later for *checks notes* schools or something which then went towards the stadium.
Clever that, kind of like outsourcing censorship.
So, over/under on whether or not Arizona builds the stadium anyway?
And promises about "private funding" inevitably end up being broken, too. When the ballot for Coors Field was up for vote, it was claimed that the new team would end up paying for at least half of the cost. It ended up being about 10%, but because the Denver economy went on a multi-year tear from about 1993-2007, the cost was paid off and they later rolled the tax into the Broncos new stadium.
Where was this? Seattle? that explains everything.
Nice stadium you got there, Glendale. Be a shame if something happened to it! No, Tempe didn’t learn ANYTHING from Glendale’s bad experience. No city will EVER learn anything from experience. After all, they ALL want to become “world-class" cities and EVERYONE knows you cannot be a “world-class city” without several professional sports teams to attract … um, er … where was I going with that?
I’ve spent a lot of time in Tempe. It would take a lot for it to become a ‘world-class city.’ It’s a decent little (large) university town, and there’s nothing wrong with that.
Why would you name the team Coyotes when you know in the near future the WOKE will be screaming "RACIST"?
It should be illegal, or at least laughable, to petition the government for money. The government prints money, but the government does no productive work that creates wealth. Their revenue stream is taxes, which are required ONLY because we cannot expect people to voluntarily fund the government; such a government would be vulnerable to capture by well-heeled interlopers. Since taxes are involuntary, they must only be used to fund government, and their use should be circumspect and modest. Spending money on anything that isn't a direct proper function of government is obviously erroneous; deliberately spending money on groups or individuals, especially when such an expense is done with a quid-pro-quo, is manifestly corrupt, and anyone who attempts it should be charged with treason.
You were doing OK there for a couple sentences until you ran off the rails and used the word "treason".
It's such an ingenious scam, billionaires pitting city against city to get a massive, almost direct, wealth transfer from the middle class to themselves, right out in the open and with much of said middle class rabidly demanding the wealth transfer. All because of some bizarre misplaced sense of civic pride or something.
You said it all.
Population migration and the destruction of the World War II civic consensus left most Americans with very little in the way of civic institutions that serve to bind their communities together and increase social trust bonds. Pro sports teams are one of the few that are left, which is why they either get what they want when they come to the trough, or someone in another city gives it to them.
Sports arenas and stadiums have become the great taxpayer ripoff while the team owners count their money. meanwhile the people who live around such facilities are plagued with massive traffic jams and even worse, more crime but...who cares as long as our fair city has a pro sports team to represent it no matter what the cost to the general public and taxpayers.
It's about time voters said fuck you to the pro sports industrial complex.
If taxpayers are forced to buy ziggurat stadiums, they should at the least expect a significant cut of the revenue to profit from "their" investment as well as part ownership of the sports teams that use state/city names.
City of Tempe was to pay for remediation of the property with Meruelo footing the arena bills. In an ironic twist the land will have to be remediated for any project so at some point City of Tempe will be on the hook for it which is why the city government supported the project.