Quote:
Originally Posted by MalcolmTucker
The dome is getting old. At some point in the not too distant future it will need a big investment to preserve the current use. Edmonton when they reached a similar point costed their preserve and enhance renovations at north of $250 million. And no amount of money will make the dome's roof modern concert capable. What the dome's amount is - I couldn't say. CBEC had their dome estimate for ensuring the facility could last until the end of the games at $10 million, assuming that the facility had already been vacated by the Flames and would be demolished soon after. So somewhere between $10 million and $250 million.
In the 90s the operational subsidy from the city for the Dome when the Flames were only responsible for the costs associated with the nights they used it was in the $5-7 million range (working from memory here). There were no property taxes paid then. When the arrangement was shifted to a Flames head lease, the city got to drop its cash subsidy, but due to the lease, the dome became liable for property taxes, so the city exempted it. The city ended up ahead in the deal by having no ongoing subsidy. (setting aside any initial capital costs)
Also is exempting a future arena a cost to the city? Only if the land the future facility is on has a potential commercial or residential use that is being not only displaced by the development, but eliminated entirely.
|
The Flames would love negotiations to start with the current agreement, but reality is, the current agreement is absolutely horrible for the City (meaning people of the city) when you consider the value of the building and the cost of the tax exemptions, balanced by the amount of revenue that the Flames take in from that building.
A 1/3rd subsidy towards the capital cost should be the extent that the city puts in to the building proper, and the Flames should not be tax exempt. There are additional costs that the city takes care of, such as all the improvements on Stampede grounds and around there, including the LRT station. The Flames are not a charitable not for profit business. They are a massive money maker, particularly when you consider what the ownership is able to rake in from leveraging the building for non-sports.
If the Flames want more dollars against capital costs from the city, the city should receive $1M rent for each non-hockey event. I mean the reality is, the owners put up hockey as the thing, but rake in the mega bucks with concerts for which they have the arena for free. That's not fair.