“I do agree that the Rays are a “regional asset”, and will work tirelessly with the political and business leaders of Tampa Bay in support of this club. However, there is no resident of the entire region who has given up more in this quest for baseball than the resident of St. Petersburg and Pinellas County. The taxpaying rresidents of St. Petersburg and Pinellas County have invested hundreds of millions of dollars in support of Major League Baseball and the Rays, and above all else, their interests will always come first.
Earlier this week, Mr. Sternberg issues a statement, “the Rays will not be playing in Tropicana Field when our current lease expires in the year 2027″. and in the spirit of full cooperation with one of our most prominent business partners, the City of St. Petersburg is ready, willing and able to explore future facility sites located in St. Peterburg, including sits in the area commonly referred to as The Greater Gateway.” To begin a time line for construction prior to 2027, an amendment to our existing agreement would be required. I intend to convey to Mr. Sternberg aour willingness to engage the Rays in this discussion immediately, in spite of the fact that seventeen years remain on the existing agreement.
Let me be clear – we will consider any potential ballpark site in St. Petersburg and the Gateway, but only as part of a process that recognizes and rewards the previous and ongoing investment and commitment of the St. Petersburg and Pinellas County resident, and thus, no sites outside our geographic boundaries will be considered. This is consistent with every previous statement made by this administration, both publically and behind closed doors with Rays’ management.
Translation: Foster is thumping his chest. The fact is the Rays could pull a Baltimore Colts and move the team in the middle of the night. The Rays would let the city that courts them pay the fines and legal fees to St. Petersburg. That is what St. Petersburg was willing to do when they attempted to steal the White Sox and Giants from their hometowns.
I don't think the Rays can survive in St. Petersburg. South Tampa makes sense for the team economically. What wouldn't make sense is Hillsborough County taxpayers' har earned money being used to build a stadium for a for profit franchise. There was once a time when sports franchises built their own stadiums.
We look forward to ongoing dialogue with the Rays…”
I agree that it's chest thumping, but give Foster credit for saying the right thing here. He needs to push the contract and point out the legal obligations of the Rays. He's also being reasonable in accepting that something has to change with the rays situation and offering the "gateway" area (the best possibly compromise, in my opinion) as a viable stadium site.
ReplyDeleteThat said, how we get that stadium built is a mystery to me. St. Pete is already tapped out, with the Pier refurb coming and the cops asking for an $80 million upgrade. And are voters in anti-tax Tampa really going to add a new stadium tax AFTER voting on a light rail tax? (I can make a case that no matter which way the light rail vote goes, it will be a bad omen for any stadium tax vote.)
And yes, in the past, cities could pony up the cash to pay these fines and move teams. You know of any municipalities with that kind of cash lying around right now? If so, let me know and I'll consider moving there.
I think the Hillsborough County Commission (whatever) Mayor, and Tampa City Council will find a way to jam a tax for a stadium. The tax to build the RayJay was tied to education.
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