As our green and gold heroes sputter into the break, there’s a lot of news to cover. Where to begin? Let’s start locally. From the Argus:
- Lew Wolff and former Fremont mayor Gus Morrison will meet today over coffee to discuss the ballpark village plans, and Morrison’s misgivings over them. I’m guessing Massimo’s?
- The Tri-Cities Landfill at the west end of Auto Mall Parkway closed to the public at the end of June. Fremont, Newark, and Union City garbage is going to the new Transfer Center a mile away, and soon the refuse will be trucked from there to the Altamont landfill. In the future Tri-Cities will be covered over with grass so that it looks less like a landfill and more like, um, a grass-covered former landfill.
- The City of Oakland is opening a four-month window to negotiate with the Wayans Brothers and Pacifica Capital Group on their proposed movie studio and entertainment center concept. There would be 100,000 s.f. of studio lot, 457,000 s.f. of retail, and a 331,250 s.f. for a “Creative Factory business park.” I know you’re going to ask, “Why would the City support this as opposed to keeping the A’s?” The 70-acre plan doesn’t include any housing, which would conflict with Port operations. Housing is the linchpin to the A’s Town concept.
From Chron:
- Authors Roger Noll and Dave Zirin contributed two articles titled, “Are stadiums worth the high price?” Noll gives an overview of stadium funding history over the last two decades and contrasts it with the A’s and 49ers’ situations, while Zirin covers the owners fleecing the public in far more broad terms.
- The paper’s 20 worst commutes has I-880 south at Fremont Blvd (South) as the second worst in the Bay Area, though it notes “Work under way to widen a highway that drops down to three lanes. Things should improve when work is finished in 2009.” They should’ve also qualified that the 880 South problem is only during the morning commute.
Finally, the Merc details how the ballpark in China Basin helped create the real estate boom. Frankly, the internets was always far more influential to me.