I don't disagree with you on the location vis-a-vis tailgating (which, I frankly don't give even half a shit about), or even that a suburban location would be best for the facility - though i have my doubts based on the desire to use it for final fours and other big events...Gil Dobie wrote:...and the people north of Hwy 36 should pay for anything in St Paul or Minneapolis without any assumed benefit. How is the baseball stadium location benefiting St Paul south of Hwy 36.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:His reluctance on this Vikings proposal is well founded - I'm a big supporter of a new stadium - but the Ramsey plan sucks out loud - and Dayton knows it.
with 50% of the tax base of the county in St. Paul - and with St. Paul poised to get none of the benefit - the plan is DOA in St. Paul - and any pol backing it here will be bounced from office (commissioner ortega tops the list) - plus, with all the site improvements, the state will be on the hook for an assload of infrastructure not included in the price tag.
it's not corporate Minneapolis that he's listening to - it's all of Ramsey County south of Hwy 36...
The stadium location will benefit St Paul and Minneapolis, not as much if it was in that particular downtown, but most of the best hotels are in Ramsey and Hennipen County. The best tailgating would be in a suburban location, otherwise the Vikings will move to LA, IMO. I'll change my statement to corporate Minnesota to include St Paul.
what i will say is this. the math doesn't work on the current plan. there simply isn't enough revenue being generated in this one small county to cover the costs incurred. it's a regional and state asset - it should be funded thus.
as for LA... it's still an empty threat. the Jaguars are at 65% capacity for most games - the Chargers are two hours down the road with a built-in fanbase... the league will let either of those teams move long before a team averaging 97% capacity for the last 10 years in a bad stadium.











