By Paul Kennedy Miami-Dade County commissioners have demonstrated their support for soccer. Just what that gets
David Beckham and his group seeking to find a home for a soccer stadium as part of the Miami bid to secure an MLS expansion team remains to seen.
The commissioners voted
unanimously Tuesday to agree to allow Mayor
Carlos Gimenez to begin negotiations on a new privately funded soccer stadium.
The Miami Herald
described the commissioners as "giddy" in support of soccer at the commission meeting.
Miami
Beckham United has expressed interest in building a stadium in an urban location -- in keeping with MLS's move into preferably downtown settings -- and it has identified county-owned land at PortMiami
as its preferred location for the stadium.
Building a consensus on a location -- at PortMiami or elsewhere -- won't be easy. Miami-Dade County commissioners asked the Beckham group to
consider other locations -- generally within their own districts.
DE BLASIO STANDS IN WAY. "Giddy" wouldn't exactly be the word used to describe the
reception to New York City FC's proposed deal to construct a 28,000-seat soccer stadium just south of Yankee Stadium in the Bronx.
High-profile investors like the New York Yankees and
Manchester City have put the project under heightened scrutiny from the New York press. In particular, Sheikh
Mansour Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Manchester City's
billionaire owner from the United Arab Emirates, has emerged as a lightning rod in the deal. (New York Daily New headline:
Bronx soccer stadium deal near Yankee Stadium
offers big incentives to Arab firm.)
But the hurdles before NYCFC are higher than that. They boil down to politics. While outgoing mayor
Michael
Bloomberg has been a staunch supporter of a soccer stadium, first in Queens and now in the Bronx, mayor-elect
Bill de Blasio is not as
pro-development.
Lis Smith, a de Blasio spokeswoman,
told the New York Times, “We have real concerns about investing scarce
public resources and forgoing revenue to support the creation of an arena for a team co-owned by one of the world’s wealthiest individuals, and will review any plan with that in mind.”
The Times estimated the cost of the project at $350 million, for which $250 million-$300 million would come from the issuance of municipal tax-exempt bonds. It reported the deal would
include exemptions from sales tax and mortgage recording tax worth an estimated $21.5 million, and NYC FC would need buy or lease from the city space currently used for parking lots.
Many
of the so-called "legacy projects" the Bloomberg administration supports -- real-estate development projects that will take years to complete -- will be hard to unravel once de Blasio takes over on
Jan. 1, but the Times
reported that plans for the Bronx soccer stadium
could still be halted or changed.
De Blasio, New York's public advocate, opposed the soccer stadium project MLS initiated at Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens on the grounds that the
stadium would have been built on prime parkland. His mayoral campaign featured lots of anti-development rhetoric.
“The era of giving away prime land to commercial interests at
bargain basement prices must come to an end," de Blasio
said in July.
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Pay off DeBlasio he will let you do what ever you want. That is how NYC got Uber and MMA.