Summing it up (with Slusser update)

Mark Purdy takes all of the stuff we’ve learned over the past couple of weeks and neatly summarizes it, with a few more tidbits thrown in for good measure.

  • The January owners meetings will by January 11-12.
  • Lew Wolff says that he has not been any discussions about selling the team.
  • San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed craps all over Oakland’s plans (such as they are).

I get the feeling that a lot of San Jose boosters are very excited this holiday season. Their gift will have to wait until after the New Year.

Updated 11/22 1:30 AM – Susan Slusser also adds to the story, describing Wolff’s trip to Scottsdale to meet with Selig two weeks ago. This time, Billy Beane was reportedly on board. Here’s the sure-to-be-controversial bit:

Oakland lost money last season for the first time this century, with an expected shortfall of several million dollars, according to Beane. The team is consistently a recipient of $20 million or more in revenue sharing, and Oakland’s attendance actually went up in 2011, but the payroll also went up $15 million, from $52 million to $67 million.

In past years, when the A’s were clearly out of contention close to the non-waiver trade deadline, the team’s modus operandi was often to sell off players. Part of the reasoning was to get young players (probably with little-to-no service time), part of it was to dump salary. 2011 was different in that despite the team was mired near the cellar for much of the second half, yet Beane and David Forst did not sell off Josh Willingham, Coco Crisp, or any of the starting staff. The only notable trades were of Brad Ziegler and Mark Ellis, and in Ellis’s situation the A’s actually sent the Rockies a little cash to make the deal work. While it would make sense to hold onto Willingham if they weren’t receiving anything they wanted in trade, if they held on they’d potentially get a first round or sandwich pick as compensation when some other team signed Willingham.

By not trading any of the veteran free-agent-to-be outfielders (Willingham, Crisp, Matsui), the A’s kept $3-6 million on the payroll. That’s probably the difference between breaking even and losing money in 2011, if Beane is to be believed. Keep in mind how this works from an accounting standpoint: unlike moneymaking teams who get virtually all of their revenues either in advance or throughout the course of the season, the A’s revenue sharing check only comes in December, well after the season is over. They and the other have-not teams don’t consider the revenue sharing receipt as part of their P&L because it’s not there when it can make a big impact. (No, the check is not going to impress Scott Boras if Beane calls about Prince Fielder.) On the other hand, it has a short-term turbo-boost effect on teams that recently opened or are about to open new ballparks, since those teams can get both the receipt for the past season and higher projected revenues for the first season in the new park.

Did Beane and Wolff hold onto to the outfielders in order to prove a point to Selig and MLB? That the M.O. of the past decade(s) was untenable in the long run, while bucking the trend doesn’t work in the short term? Surely they must have realized that Type B compensation was going away – it was talked about throughout the season – so why keep David DeJesus? It wouldn’t surprise me in the least if this was planned, given the current spending freeze until a resolution to the stadium problem is found. It reminds me of that silly fake-to-third-throw/fake-to-first play. It’s plainly obvious what’s happening and it elicits a chorus of boos. Once in a while it actually works.

Tony LaRussa is a reasonable man

The Chronicle’s John Shea caught up with retired skipper Tony LaRussa a few weeks after the afterglow of winning yet another World Series. TLR said this about the A’s future:

Q: Your A’s teams often packed the Coliseum. What’s your take on A’s ownership’s desire to move to San Jose?

A: “The A’s should stay in the Bay Area with a legitimate shot to compete economically, and there are some real doubts it can happen in Oakland. The Giants got the (territorial) rights (to San Jose in the early ’90s) because (former A’s owner) Walter Haas just said ‘here.’ There was no reason other than to be real nice and fair and give them to the Giants. I don’t know what the grounds would be for the Giants to say it’s ours and not the A’s.”

Couldn’t have said it better myself. TLR clearly knows of what he speaks. He and his family have maintained their East Bay home all this time and run ARF out of Walnut Creek, so he’s still very much plugged into the Bay Area.

Later in the interview, TLR talks about having a role with one of the Bay Area teams, though he thinks there may not be room for him in either organization. There’s always room for TLR as an advisor, if I have anything to say about it.

Rosenthal has scoop on San Jose (Updated with analysis)

Read Fox Sports baseball writer Ken Rosenthal’s new article on A’s-to-San Jose move developments, then check back here for analysis and discussion.

The big stuff from Rosenthal:

  • MLB wants a larger seating capacity than 32,000. FWIW, last year I explained how the A’s could get up to either 36,000 or 38,000 by simply adding four rows to one or both seating levels.
  • Selig supposedly warned Wolff that $180 million precluded a move to the South Bay. First, take a look at the chart of recent franchise sales I posted last May. Then consider two takeaways from this: 1) Wolff may have to pay compensation to enter Santa Clara County even if he disagrees with it, 2) An Oakland or East Bay-based A’s automatically has a depressed value, as was speculated when Steve Schott lacked interest in Uptown. How does MLB reconcile those two problems, which are clearly related?
  • The usual back-and-forth between Wolff and critics, and the Giants’ continued intransigence.
  • MLB could explore the Montreal option and buy the club and resell when they get a stadium deal and a buyer for the team. Of course, that only hastened the Expos’ departure from Montreal. Also, MLB has to know by now that $500 million for an Oakland ballpark with the economic and political climate in California is going to be more than a little difficult. It goes back to bullet point #2 above: if MLB and prospective owners know that Oakland and the East Bay are limited in terms of revenue generation, what is the financial incentive to build there? How does that help the franchise or MLB for that matter?
  • There’s a claim that the Giants would have to hit 3.2 million in attendance in order to “break even” with a projected $130 million payroll in 2012. That’s a curious point, and one I’d ascribe to a talking point from someone in the Giants, until I looked at the numbers. This past season, the Giants hit a $114 million payroll figure on $230 million in revenue (49.5%). Historically, the Giants have been at around 52-53% of revenue over the course of the last CBA, though in 2008 they hit 56%. That’s probably their upper limit, and $130 million in payroll would speak to that unless they got some new revenue stream out of nowhere. Or unless someone took some dead weight contracts off their hands.

All of the things I’ve been hearing leading up to the owners meetings is that some sort of resolution is due as soon as January. Rosenthal’s article certainly supports this, and actually gives a tiny amount of credence to the idea that Selig is being thorough. (Imagine that?) The path to resolution, as described by Rosenthal, is not the easiest to negotiate.

That’s a lot to take in for a lazy Saturday afternoon. I’ll be off to a birthday party soon, so my contributions to the comments thread may be limited the rest of the day. I’ll still check in every so often, so behave yourselves.

Added 4:20 PM – The Merc’s Scott Herhold picks apart the San Jose ballpark land deal, calls critics “short-sighted”.

Checking the couch for loose change

Mary Ann Azevedo of the SV/SJ Business Journal has the news (print version) that the San Jose Redevelopment Agency is using proceeds from the summer sale of various downtown properties to pay off lingering and pressing debts, instead of using the money to pay for ballpark land.

The numbers paint an interesting picture:

  • Sale proceeds are around $19.9 million, which is less than the $25 million SJRA and the City expected to get when the properties went up for bidding early in the year.
  • The discount on the five acres of ballpark land is $19 million, based on the combined original purchase price for the various properties and not accounting for inflation.

It would seem that if the A’s paid the full $25 million for the land, it would help the City further service agency debt while also countering a criticism that that Lew Wolff is getting a plum deal. Even if the A’s paid $12 million more, which would be the appraised “ballpark purpose” market value, it would significantly dull the chief argument by ballpark opponents.

Of course, it’s easy to say the A’s should keep piling on the dollars since it’s their money. They’re only footing the bill for the rest of the land and relocation costs, infrastructure improvements (in all likelihood), and the cost of ballpark itself. By my math the cost of the entire project, including land, is somewhere in the neighborhood of $550 million. If the City continues to provide the $19 million discount on less than half the ballpark land, the A’s and Wolff are paying for 96.5% of the entire project along with 100% of stadium construction cost. There’s no other public-private funding mix in recent history that comes close to this. By comparison, AT&T Park’s public-private mix was roughly 80-20 ($357 privately financed construction, $90 million in publicly-financed land, infrastructure, and tax abatement). FYI, the best deal in all of North American pro sports over the last 30 years is probably the late Bill Davidson’s The Palace of Auburn Hills.

Even with the land sale, SJRA is not in the clear. The fate of the agency lies in the California Supreme Court, where the Justices are expected to decide how redevelopment will be formed moving forward.

Meanwhile, Oakland continues to pursue redevelopment despite impending doom. It’s spending nearly $8 million to spruce up the aging Convention Center. The Port of Oakland, in conjunction with the City, is applying for a $40 million grant to transform the Oakland Army Base into a “trade and logistics center.” I’m sure the pollution-plagued residents of West Oakland are in love with that idea.

News for 11/17/11 (Post Owners Meetings Edition)

Time for a recap of the owners meetings.

  • The Astros will be in the American League West starting in 2013. Next up: Figuring out the details of the scheduling format. Despite the grousing from many about the change, a few columnists have written in favor of the move, including ESPN’s Jayson Stark and Danny Knobler of CBS Sports. Newly approved owner Jim Crane was required to accept the move to the AL as a condition of his approval. Crane was unanimously approved.
  • Stark also considers how another change, the addition of two more wild-card teams, could affect the annual playoff chase and divisional races.
  • MLB and the MLBPA have agreed to a five-year CBA. Ken Rosenthal reports that an announcement will occur on Monday.
  • Larry Baer was approved as the “control person” representing the San Francisco Giants at future owners meetings. There may have been more recent instances of this, but one high-profile one I clearly remember is Paul Beeston when he became CEO of the Toronto Blue Jays. Howard Lincoln also performs a similar duty on behalf of Nintendo for the Seattle Mariners.
  • The Los Angeles Dodgers saga continues, with pre-screening for prospective bidders scheduled to begin soon. That’s a good thing, because as Forbes’ Mike Ozanian reports, the Dodgers are saddled with a whopping $555 million in debt. Another lawsuit has been filed by Frank McCourt against Fox for allegedly trying to “interfere with the sale of the Dodgers and their assets in bankruptcy.”
  • Nothing on the A’s front, though there are murmurs of something happening in January. Maybe. The wait continues.

In other news…

  • The outlook for the NBA is not good. Dwyane Wade and most of the players rank-and-file believe the 2011-12 season can be saved (as they should since they’re losing paychecks from here on out). Meanwhile, former players union executive director Charles Grantham joined Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Magic Johnson in voicing their opinion that the players should have taken the last “50%” deal.
  • NHL players are looking at what’s happening in the NBA very carefully, since hockey’s CBA will end next September.
  • Starting Friday, the Florida Marlins will no longer exist. They will be known forevermore as the Miami Marlins.
  • I haven’t posted much on the Minnesota Vikings’ stadium push, simply because it doesn’t seem to have any real momentum or money behind it. The team remains focused on the Arden Hills munitions site in suburban Ramsey County, whereas the City of Minneapolis has sites within city limits.
  • CSN Bay Area’s Nick Rosano has an update on the San Jose Earthquakes’ stadium plans. A permit hearing should be held soon. I’ll attend it if I can.
  • Santa Clara approved the $10 million expenditure for pre-construction work at the 49ers stadium site. $6 million will actually be loaned by the team.
  • MLB is commissioning a study on the economic impact of Miller Park now that the ballpark is well-established and past its honeymoon period. The study will be done by the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Institute for Survey and Policy Research. The same group did a study shortly after the opening of Miller Park which fell under heavy criticism. The study is due in the spring and could provide ammunition for either pro or anti-ballpark groups in San Jose (yes, I know that the anti-ballpark folks will trot out a Cato Institute study). Since the study is being commissioned by MLB, I expect it to be somewhat baseball-friendly, though not as much as the previous one.
  • The Financial Times has a Moneyball article featuring both Billy Beane and Michael Lewis. It’s a good read and serves as a nice epilogue to the book and movie. There’s also a discussion of the article at AN.
  • A new article by Carol Rosen of the Almaden Resident (a Silicon Valley Community Newspaper) examines the pro and anti San Jose ballpark factions and their stances.

That’s all for now.

Running log of Owners Meetings news

We’ll be checking the Twitter and the interwebs for any and all news coming out of the owners meetings, which start today. If you see anything new, post it to the comments and we’ll add it to the post in short order.

  • As expected, Jim Crane will be approved as the new owner of the Houston Astros. What’s not certain is the discount on the $680 million purchase price he’ll get for agreeing to move the franchise to the American League. SI’s Jon Heyman reports the discount at $50 million, USA Today’s Bob Nightengale has it at $80 million.
  • MLB Trade Rumors has an item from Joel Sherman of the New York Post indicating that Type B free agent compensation will be eliminated starting this offseason. Changes to Type A free agent compensation may start next offseason.
  • CBA discussions appear to be ongoing, according to Fox Sports. The MLBPA has even postponed internal meetings to focus entirely on the CBA.
  • According to the Chronicle’s Susan Slusser, the A’s are not pursuing oft-injured OF Grady Sizemore, citing their continued stance of not looking at free agents while the stadium issue is up in the air.
  • Added 11/16 9:15 AM – Buster Olney (ESPN Insider req’d) again writes about the A’s being held hostage by the stadium situation, and an impending fire sale. [Sorry, I’m not an Insider so I didn’t read the full article either.]
  • Added 11/16 10:35 AM – SI’s Jon Heyman reports that Crane’s discount will be $65 million, MLB owners paying $35 million and Drayton McLane paying $30 million. He also noted that there is some opposition from AL West clubs, but Crane will be approved regardless. Does this set a standard for compensation to the Giants?
  • Added 11/16 6:35 PM – The Dodgers and Frank McCourt are suing TV rights holder Fox for allegedly trying to “interfere with the sale of the Dodgers and their assets in bankruptcy.” McCourt claims that not allowing bidding on a future TV contract could adversely affect the sale price of the franchise. Fox states that it holds an exclusive negotiating period starting next year for the next contract, and that McCourt’s attempt to sell the rights now is a breach of that agreement. MLB is staying neutral in the matter. This issue is not expected to delay the eventual sale of the Dodgers.
  • Added 11/16 6:50 PM – ESPN reports that Jim Crane was, in fact, required to move the Astros to the American League as a condition of the franchise sale. Vote scheduled for Thursday morning.
  • Added 11/16 10:50 PM – The Chronicle’s Henry Schulman reports that Larry Baer was interviewed by baseball’s executive committee today, which sets up his approval as managing partner – er, “control person” – of the Giants.
  • Added 11/17 9:40 AM – Two additional wild card teams have been added to the playoffs. Wild card teams in each league will probably play each other in a one-game playoff, with each winner playing the division winner with the best record.
  • Added 11/17 11:00 AM – Jim Crane was unanimously approved as the new owner of the Houston Astros.
  • Added 11/17 2:00 PM – Baer was approved as control person, meaning he represents the Giants at the owners meetings without having a controlling ownership stake. Baer is also CEO of the Giants.

Non-owners meeting link: SJSU Political Science professor and TV political analyst Larry Gerston has a short piece at NBC Bay Area about the debate over San Jose giving a land discount to the A’s, and the greater question of subsidies for private parties.

Another NOML: The Trib’s Angela Woodall reports that Oakland’s parcel tax Measure I, meant to replenish funding for city services, failed 62-38 via mail-in vote yesterday.

More as it comes.

Weekend Merc items about A’s, 49ers + Gas pipeline info

Nothing new on the A’s front, whether it’s the Merc’s Internal Affairs folks reading something into the oft-linked column by the NY Daily News’ Bill Madden, or a throwaway, unattributable line by Gary Radnich. When IA reached out to Lew Wolff, he told them he has not gotten any approval to move the franchise to San Jose, definitive or tacit.

Over in Santa Clara, the City Council is set to approve $10 million for what it terms pre-construction work: site clearing, movement of utilities, etc. Since there is nothing but pavement at the site this shouldn’t be a big deal. Whatever controversy was stirred up about the stadium site’s proximity to a branch of the Hetch Hetchy pipeline has rightly disappeared. A PG&E gas transmission pipeline also runs through the Great America theme park proper, not the stadium site, so there should be no problem there. While the $10 million is a decent amount of money, it’s a drop in the bucket compared to the total cost of the new stadium, which has not yet been fully financed and still has many questions about the Stadium Authority’s ability to get that funding (as long as the stadium remains a one-horse town). The detail in the article seems to belie the 49ers’ suggestions that they could open the stadium by the 2014 season. To understand what it would take, let’s plot how everything would have to work:

  • The article notes that the pre-construction phase will take five months starting in January.
  • Sometime in that five months, funding sources for at least the initial major phases of construction would have to be lined up.
  • Groundbreaking (not the “soft” form discussed in the article) would have to occur no later than May-July to make a September 2014 opening. This allows for minimal slack in the schedule.
  • Unlike the A’s plan for Cisco Field having limited finished or air-conditioned space, the 49ers stadium is expected to have a large amount of finished space because of its role as an extension of the Santa Clara Convention Center. That should make the project take a little longer to complete, though it shouldn’t affect the ability of the 49ers to host games there.

That said, the project continues to advertise a 2015 opening.

Speaking of gas pipelines, the issue of pipeline safety has gotten much greater attention since the San Bruno disaster over a year ago. For my own edification, I took a look at where the gas pipelines run relative to current and proposed stadium sites.

  • Oakland Coliseum Complex: A small pipeline spur runs across the Nimitz to Oracle Arena. It’s likely that this was done specifically to service the complex’s gas needs.
  • Victory Court: Pipeline adjacent to land running along UPRR tracks. Another pipeline branch runs along Fallon Street and Victory Court. This makes sense for a company that extensively uses gas in its business like Peerless Coffee, not sure how it benefits other area businesses.
  • Candlestick Park: No pipeline in the immediate area.
  • AT&T Park: No pipeline in the immediate area.
  • HP Pavilion: No pipeline in the immediate area.
  • Diridon South: No pipeline in the immediate area.

It may seem like a minor detail, but the cost and time required to relocate a transmission pipeline is a big deal. As we have seen in the aftermath of the San Bruno tragedy, there’s no excuse for cutting corners.

Don’t expect major news next week

Last week I suggested that the Dodgers’ situation would take the A’s off the agenda for next week’s owners’ meetings. The closer we get to the sessions, the more I suspect that this is correct. The one thing that might have allowed the A’s to be brought up next week would’ve been an early CBA announcement, but none has happened as of yet. So it’s A) CBA, B) Dodgers, C) Astros, plus whatever committee stuff is on the agenda. Unless a miracle happens, the A’s will not be up for discussion at all.

That’s bad news for many fans hoping that a resolution to the A’s situation would allow the front office to start building next season’s team in earnest. If Billy Beane and Lew Wolff hold fast to their “no spending while in limbo” stance, the December GM meetings will come and go with little movement. Of course, there’s no stopping Beane from making moves well after the GM meetings (the Swisher trade was in January 2008), and regardless of stadium/site news the team were not expected to be a player for any big free agents. Instead, they’ll make the usual arbitration deadline offers for guys like Coco Crisp and Josh Willingham, and scoop up whatever picks they can when those two are signed by other teams.

This week I’ve seen frequent references to a Bill Madden article at the NY Daily News from last weekend. Here’s Madden’s scoop:

Are the Oakland A’s finally about to know the way to San Jose?

According to baseball insiders, the reason A’s co-owner Lew Wolff, the L.A.-based real-estate developer and close personal Selig ally, is not going to be a bidder in the Frank McCourt Dodger auction (as had been frequently speculated) is because the commissioner has given him tacit assurance that his effort to move the A’s to a new stadium in San Jose is eventually going to be approved.

Once Selig completes his major accomplishment of ridding the game and liberating the Dodgers of McCourt – which hopefully will be before Opening Day – he can turn his attention to the A’s, who have been waiting more than two years for his relocation study committee to deliver its report on San Jose and the San Francisco Giants’ territorial rights there.

Again, Wolff wasn’t going to be caught up in the Dodgers’ bidding process because A) he’s fully committed to the San Jose project and the A’s, and B) the fact that the Dodgers will be sold through an auction means that the team will go to the highest bidder instead of a deal orchestrated by Bud Selig. Note that Madden doesn’t say when Wolff will be granted San Jose, only that it’ll happen after the Dodgers sale is wrapped up. The next logical time for a decision to be made would be the next owners’ meetings, which are usually in mid-January. With several major issues presumably off the table, the A’s plight could finally get the attention it deserves. It’s also possible that the Giants’ managing partner discussion will come up at that point, making the possibility of both coming into play simultaneously that much more acute. The Dodgers probably won’t come up again because with the number of parties expected to bid on the Dodgers, I doubt the prescreening process will be finished by then. It would make more sense for the owners to approve the ownership change in May, as they did with the Rangers last year.

Maybe I’ll be wrong on this. Everything I’m reading and hearing points to events moving in that oh-so-deliberate fashion for the green-and-gold heroes. The quick acceleration of the Dodgers situation – which I’m sad to admit is more important from a business standpoint for MLB – makes it absolutely imperative that Selig addresses them first.

Redevelopment Hearing 11/10/11

The following is purely my observations and reporting. By no means am I a legal expert of any kind.

Proceedings today were short and sweet, so that and the court’s ban on electronic devices made it impossible for me to liveblog. Not to worry for those interested in the redevelopment saga, as I took fairly copious notes.

The case is S194861, California Redevelopment Association et al. v. Matosantos et al., or more succinctly, Redevelopment v. State of California. You may remember that the state’s summer budget battle largely hinged on the fate of redevelopment agencies, as they would be tapped over the next few years to patch a gaping hole in the state budget. The previous November, Brown was elected along with Proposition 22, a piece of legislation designed to prohibit raids on RDAs. The case is based on the idea that the twin bills passed in the Legislature, ABX26 and ABX27, violated Proposition 22 and Article 16 of the State Constitution, and thus should be struck down.

A little background is in order. In short, ABX26 bans additional borrowing or bonding by RDAs retroactive to the beginning of the year. It outlines how payments are to be made to the State or local school districts (if cities choose to use that alternative). ABX26 prohibits additional functioning of any RDA if payments to the state/school districts are not made. ABX27 explains how RDAs or successor agencies are to function if payments are met. The program ABX27 details is called the Voluntary Alternative Redevelopment Plan.

Representing the CRA was Steven Mayer, a director at SF law firm Howard Rice. He faced two opponents, Ross Moody from the State Attorney General and James Williams from the Santa Clara County General Counsel. (After oral arguments were done, Mr. Williams’ mother stood behind me in the “device check” line, beaming with pride. Her son did a good job, BTW.)

As the petitioner’s counsel, Mayer was up both first and last. Despite the term “oral arguments,” the session doesn’t allow for big sweeping speeches by either party. Instead, the lawyers were peppered with questions by the seven justices. Immediately, Justice Joyce Kennard framed the argument in a question, asking Mayer if the case was basically the State and Schools vs. Redevelopment Agencies. Mayer didn’t answer the question directly, instead saying, “That is the effect” of the legislation. He went on to claim that the “vice” of the twin props is not that they dissolve RDAs, it’s that it transfers money to the state. Moreover, there are corner cases or gray areas in which the City (or County) loaned money to its RDA. Those types of debts aren’t guaranteed, which puts some cities, especially ones with large RDAs, at special risk. Moody’s rebuttal was that the cities who made such loans should have known how risky such transfers were and that they wouldn’t necessarily be protected. Most redevelopment-related financing is done via bonds backed by tax increment, so it’s easy to see how the money was raised, if not how it was spent. Loans from a municipality to an RDA don’t have such backing. Moody pointed to the fact that ABX26 has language that allows for “all enforceable agreements will be discharged.”

A major sticking point between the two parties was how the two bills functioned together. Moody and Williams argued that the two laws could be enacted separately. Williams actually argued for ABX26 to be upheld and ABX27 to be struck down, which would effectively kill RDAs dead. Mayer considered ABX26 a life-or-death matter for RDAs and argued for it to be struck down, while ABX27 could be upheld and RDAs could continue to exist, albeit in a somewhat neutered form. Moody spoke in favor of both being upheld. There were several questions from the Justices trying to get at whether the two laws are separate or, as Mayer put it, “joined at the hip”. Deciding that may be key to both laws’ eventual fate.

Complicating matters is Mayer’s admission that 90% of RDAs throughout California are getting ready to make payments in compliance with the new laws should they be upheld. As I’ve been reported throughout the summer, many cities are fighting the laws through the CRA lawsuit while hedging their bets by setting aside money for payments.

At the heart of the matter is the constitutionality of the laws. Mayer argued that because of the combination of redevelopment being enshrined in the Constitution and the effects of Propositions 1A and 22, the state was not authorized to either raid RDAs or kill them. Moody argued that redevelopment was enacted by statue in 1945, and only the power to raise funds via tax increment was enshrined in the Constitution in 1952. That’s an important distinction to make as it’s the difference between having the Legistature pass a bill and the public approving it via referendum. Therefore, the ability to create and run RDAs was created by statute and could be taken away by statute (ABX26/27). The Justices, perhaps looking for a third way, asked Moody if cities could have special tax imposed for redevelopment projects upon voter approval. Moody replied that this could happen.

All in all, I came away from the hearing with a much better understanding of the issues and what’s at stake for all parties. The fact that a lawyer representing Santa Clara County was present was no accident. The City of San Jose is a party in this lawsuit, and it only stands to reason that the County, which has had a contentious relationship with the City for years (if not decades), took up the fight as well. Discussion outside the courtroom centered around the timing of the Justices’ decision, which could be as early as mid-December. Regardless of the actual decision, that would be the best timing since it would allow the State and municipalities to plot their course with at least some advance notice. If the decision came in January, around the time of the first payment due date, the whole thing could become highly chaotic. That’s the last thing California and its cities and counties need.

News for 11/09/11

Tomorrow morning I’ll be in SF to check out oral arguments for the State vs. Redevelopment case. If I can liveblog it, I will.

The regular media (SFGate, Merc, MLB.com, KGO) covered yesterday’s proceedings fairly well, though I’m surprised there wasn’t a bigger mention of the discussion about the referendum requirement. No matter, the San Jose City Council formalized the requirement by amending the motion just before passing it. Still, I don’t think this is the last of the referendum discussion.

There’s other news on the ballpark/stadium front:

  • The Royals may or may not have agreement in place to sell the naming rights to venerable Kauffman Stadium.
  • Rangers Ballpark in Arlington is undergoing $12 million in renovations, including a major revamp of the area behind centerfield. Changes will include relocation of the suboptimally located visitor’s bullpen, the addition of an indoor club and several concession stands.
  • The University of Washington’s Husky Stadium just started a massive $250 million renovation project. The track will be removed, the field dropped four feet, and more seats will be added close to the field, similar to the changes at the LA Memorial Coliseum. In addition, new locker room and training facilities will be added, as well as premium seating options. Like the $321 million Cal Memorial Stadium renovations, these will be largely dependent on donations for funding. The Huskies will play next season at CenturyLink Field (formerly Qwest Field).
  • The Populous architect overseeing the 2022 Qatar World Cup project believes that the venues will not need air conditioning. The goal is to make the venues carbon neutral, something that made the winning Qatar bid attractive. A company called Arup Associates has a demo of the technology in place at a 500-seat stadium, though you could naturally be skeptical about the ability of the tech to scale to a venue with 100 times the spectators.
  • The Sacramento Bee’s Marcos Breton wonders what the ongoing NBA lockout means for the local arena effort.
  • A report on NPR’s Morning Edition goes over the economic impact of the lockout.
  • A’s naming rights sponsor Cisco Systems (Nasdaq: CSCO) beat the Street today, which may signal an upswing for the networking giant. The stock was down during the regular session but up in after hours trading.

That’s all for now.