TRUTH vs. LIES
about the proposed new Royals stadium
TRUTH vs. LIES
about the proposed new Royals stadium
Lie: The 3/8 cent sales tax is not a new tax it’s just an extension of the current sales tax.
TRUTH: The 3/8 cent sales tax on the April 2, 2024 ballot is a NEW TAX. The old tax will be repealed, and the new tax doubles the tax amount ($2 BILLION) and term length (40 YEARS).
Lie: Kauffman Stadium is in disrepair and the cost of renovations would be more than the cost of building a new stadium.
TRUTH: An engineering study was conducted by Burns & McDonnell that showed Kauffman Stadium is in “satisfactory condition.” Kauffman stadium was built in 1972, there are two other stadiums in MLB (Fenway Park and Wrigley Field) that are 60 years older than Kauffman Stadium and are not in disrepair. Arrowhead stadium is also a year older than Kauffman and only needs renovations. (Link to Burns & McDonnell report)
Lie: If the Royals don’t build a new downtown stadium the Kansas City Chiefs will leave the region because they want to use the space Kauffman Stadium sits for their own development project.
TRUTH: In January, the Kansas City Chiefs signed a statement committing to staying in Jackson County. The Chiefs are not leaving loyal fans in Jackson County and making the gross decision to destroy their brand by moving to another city. Chiefs leadership stated as much in 2023: “Our preference is to upgrade and renovate the stadium and make GEHA field at arrowhead even better.” – Mark Donovan, President, Kansas City Chiefs
Lie: The Royals new downtown Stadium won’t displace current businesses.
TRUTH: These are the list of small businesses that will be forced out if a new stadium is built downtown:
Green Dirt on Oak, a forthcoming farm-to-table restaurant at 1601 Oak St.
The Pairing, a wine bar and grocery store at 1615 Oak
Lie: The process for this sales tax ballot measure is the same as it has been in the past.
TRUTH: To date, no Lease Agreement or Community Benefit Agreement has been signed by the Kansas City Royals.
However, in 2006, when the sales tax was on the ballot, the Kansas City Royals had signed Leased Agreements and Community Benefit Agreements three months BEFORE Election Day.
Lie: Jackson County residents will benefit from the revenue generated by a new downtown stadium.
TRUTH: Jackson County does not receive any of the revenue generated at Kauffman Stadium or GEHA Field at Arrowhead. Neither for sporting events nor concerts, etc.
Lie: The new downtown baseball stadium will result in billions of dollars of economic impact to Kansas City and Jackson County as a whole.
TRUTH: Leading economist nationwide universally agree that building new stadiums with public tax dollars is a bad financial deal for taxpayers. Taxpayers fund the projects but do not share in the profits generated from these investments.
Sources:
https://www.fieldofschemes.com/about/
https://www.investigativepost.org/2021/12/13/little-economic-benefit-from-new-stadium/
https://www.cagw.org/reporting/fields-of-failure
https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2018/11/sports-stadiums-can-be-bad-cities/576334/
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