Taxpayers Will Soon Find Out if They'll Have To Finance Fancy Stadiums for the Chiefs and the Royals
Jackson County, Missouri, residents should not be billed for the undertakings of private businesses.

Professional sports team owners are at it again. This time, it's the Kansas City Chiefs and the Kansas City Royals who want fans—along with their fellow taxpayers who may be indifferent toward sports—to help with their business expenditures. Early voting has already begun as Jackson County prepares to decide whether to partially fund the teams' stadium plans or potentially lose the teams to another city.
The Chiefs proposed $800 million in renovations to the GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium, of which the owners will only pay $300 million. The Royals, meanwhile, announced in February plans for a brand new stadium estimated to cost $2 billion, only half of which is expected to be paid by the Royals in private funds.
The vote, which will conclude April 2, either will have residents opt to get rid of an existing sales tax that pays a portion of stadium operation fees or replace it with a new one—totaling approximately $2 billion and scheduled for over the course of 40 years—in order to pay a portion of the price. Each team would receive $27 million of tax money annually.
So what will happen if voters reject it? "We'd have to look at all our options," said Mark Donovan, the president of the Chiefs. "I think they'd have to include leaving Kansas City." His appeal may very well sway voters, considering there is a long history of these threats working in the city.
The Royals echoed Donovan's thought: "There's lots of cities that would love to have these franchises," said John Sherman, the majority owner of the Royals. And the Committee to Keep the Chiefs and Royals in Jackson County noted that "if the vote doesn't pass, both teams will consider all options."
But even though they insist these taxes are necessary, it's difficult not to see their threats as a way to scare voters into coughing up taxpayer dollars so both teams can save private funds. Leaked documents indicate that taxpayers could end up paying up to $5.1 billion over four decades—far more than the teams' estimate.
The sports giants are in fact so keen to save every penny that a $1 million request by Jackson County Executive Frank White Jr. to pay for the elections, in order to avoid taking funds from the city's emergency reserve, has so far gone ignored by the teams. The initiative "poses a significant dilemma," said White, "given our commitment to safeguarding the county's financial stability."
It's worth noting that the Hunt family, who owns the Chiefs and whose fortune stems from oil tycoon H. L. Hunt, is worth nearly $25 billion, according to Forbes. Putting aside the questionable ethics of weaponizing local sports enthusiasm to save private funds, there is no clear reason why the owners can't pay for the renovations themselves.
As for the Royals, the sales tax would cover only one-third of the stadium's costs. The reason is far from encouraging. Most of the funds would go toward the county's debts to Truman Sports Complex, as well as interest payments on the team's construction loan, leaving "somewhere between $250 million and $350 million that can actually be used to cover stadium expenses."
In other words, the public would be forced to pay the price for a private company's mismanagement. Also dubious is the claim that the team needs a new stadium at all: A 2022 study concluded that the current Royals home turf, Kauffman Stadium, is in "satisfactory condition."
Some small business owners are rallying against the stadiums, because, perhaps most infuriatingly, several such enterprises would be razed in the process of building the Royals stadium. "We're all kind of dumbfounded right now, still, that they did choose this location," said Matt Adkins, an owner of a wine bar and boutique grocery. "There's literally something five blocks away [in the East Village] where they're saying, 'Please come over here instead.'"
When Donovan was asked about business owners' apprehension about the effects the stadium reforms would have on the Crossroads district, he responded: "Change is hard, and there's a lot of information that needs to get out there….We think downtown baseball is right for baseball." OK. But does that make it right for the city and its residents?
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Getting one last comment in, just in case they shut us down over the weekend!
Hey, it's been nice knowing y'all.
Sorry this site devolved into TDS vs. anti-TDS over the past few years.
I have a feeling we still agree with each other a lot more than we agree with pretty much everyone else.
Still here Saturday morning. Any ideas on other sites we could migrate to?
Spiked? Miss. Org?
A downtown stadium is not needed. The parking would be horrible and traffic even worse. But I don’t understand the rush, the lease is not up for7 more years.
Yeah, downtown stadiums are cool, except for the people who actually want to go to the games.
Put it outside of town with a giant parking lot, so people can tailgate, and so game traffic and commuter traffic don't make each other worse.
That's what they have now. It's actually pretty nice.
The reason people don't go to the Royals games is because they suck. The facilities are beautiful, even if they are a bit dated.
Minor league baseball teams actually do much better when their stadiums are in the city center.
Aren’t minor league stadiums by definition in smaller cities?
Not to mention the stadiums themselves seat way fewer people, meaning less of a transportation/parking strain on the local area.
I am glad this is going up for a vote, far too many of these deals do not. I hope the voters give the teams the middle finger.
$Bazzilions of tax dollars for stadiums for ritualized violence, and we the taxpayers are forced to pay it… Baseball, football, etc.; they are all ritualized violence…
Can we just spare a bare few million for ritualized sex, too, at the local naked-titty-dancing club? A little CHOICE here, please?
Ritualized sex is FAR less likely to result in cracked ribs & broken spines & damaged brains than football (which we pay for through health insurance), BUT, NOOOO, no tax dollars for ritualized sex… Tax dollars to SHUT HER DOWN!
How do we start a movement, Free the Naked Titties-Skin, Just Say NO to Pigskin!
#FreeTheNakedTitties
#HumpHumanTittiesNotPigskin
After a very brief perusal of the Georgia film tax credit audit, I’m having a very hard time believing that a successful franchise such as the chiefs isn’t worth 500 mil in sales taxes.
The royals? Eh, that’s a whole different ball of wax, especially since they want a whole stadium and baseball is less popular than football and they aren’t perennial championship contenders.
Too bad the media is filled with untrustworthy bad faith actors and most people don’t have the time or knowledge to parse the facts. The decisions will come down to whoever has the best PR.
yay democracy !!!!
Baseball has 81 home games a year.
Football has 8 or 9.
If you can pay your quarterback 50 million dollars a year, you can probably afford to build your own stadium, or refurbish the one you already have.
Hey, if the voters approve this, it’s on them. Democracy, and all that.
Too bad they aren't required to offer their own charity by action-vote of donation instead of mob-forcing ?charity? from everyone like power-mad dictators and thieves.
Every slave chooses to be a slave.
If the voters in KC approve this, my ass living in St. Louis will still have to pay.
Considering the long tradition of state and local governments bending over to offer businesses tax breaks, why should professional sports be an exception? Oh yeah, they all have 7 or 8 figure salaries and the average Joe can’t afford tickets, never mind a beer and hot dog at their games. Fuck ‘em.
The problem is, from KC's point of view, sports franchises are worth far more money in a larger market, and there are now many larger markets without sports teams.
Sports teams play a huge role in the fabric of a community. It goes beyond money. I'm not saying they should pay for the stadiums, but it's not an easy issue.
The estimated $500,000,000 The Chiefs want subsidized would only make sense if a study shows the surrounding area and state would benefit more than that amount in sales, parking, business
tie ins etc. I'm not aware of any such studies being done so let the private business pay for itself, leave if they want and use the space for something worthwhile.
All this nonsense while the Dodgers are contemplating building a giant gondola over the ridge into Chavez Ravine to alleviate parking and want someone to pay for that.
The dodgers also have the issue of supporting a hate group full of pedofile.
The Minnisota Lakers and new Orleans jazz were key to the identity of the people in their states.
Call their bluff, and let the team leave if they want. 99% of the taxpayers will be priced out of going to games anyway, and if they watch on TV who cares where the team ends up? If they give in to the blackmail they will be held up with the same dodge in 10 years.
The 40-year time-line on the tax is a scam. If recent history is any guide, both teams will be back for renovations or new stadiums in 7-10 years.
Voters usually love corporate welfare as long as it benefits the businesses they like. The Trump Cult in particular loves it -- look at how they adore tariffs.
This is an uphill fight but I am as hostile to Trump's tariffs as I am to Hochul's Buffalo stadium deal. The late Sheldon Silver was a crook but he personally stopped a stadium deal in Manhattan.
LOL... Talk about a contradiction.
Do you think taxing imported business goods = corporate welfare?
It's truly amazing how the "tax the greedy business" leftards can literally flip-over on their backs like cheap whores when the word 'Trump' get announced. Pathetic Hypocrites.
"Most of the funds would go toward the COUNTY'S debts to Truman Sports Complex,"
Who's mismanagement?
When Three Rivers Stadium was demolished in 2000 the City of Pittsburgh still owed money on it. The reason that they owed money on it was every so often they would refinance the debt on it to make the City's finances look good.
If a Team wanted to build it's own facility, do you really think that the Local Government would let them? The Sports and Exhibition Authority (SEA) in Allegheny County is a slush fund for the County and City. Not to mention the 40% Parking Tax for any events, charged by the City.
As far as the pricing of beer and hot dogs is concerned, all concessions at any of the three venues is ran by the SEA. The Teams get none of that revenue.
=_
a trick Mahes drives a Ferrari 812. Tell me again why I should be subsidizing him?
Check out the Buffalo bills new stadium situation. State paid for it and the team owners are essentially leasing the seats for 30 years. Payment in full up front if you want to keep your seats. 8 club seats/$200k.
If this is the new NFL plan, they can kiss it goodbye.
The only way this can possibly end is if the states prohibited spending taxpayers' dollars on professional sports teams in their constitutions. I really don't see another way.