Dayton Daily News

Want a real scandal? Take a look at the NFL’s tax grab

- By Ross Marchand Ross Marchand is a policy analyst with the Taxpayers Protection Alliance. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Vice President Mike Pence was the latest official to become ensnared in the National Football League kneeling saga, after leaving the Indianapol­is ColtsSan Francisco 49ers football game in response to the “unpatrioti­c” gestures of players.

As outraged sentiments fling back and forth, talking heads and elected officials continue to nitpick while ignoring far larger issues. At a time when NFL minutiae is bound to be endlessly scrutinize­d and politicize­d, taxpayers are footing an enormous bill toward NFL teams. These subsidies, which originate at the local, state and federal levels, denigrate the game and give politician­s carte blanche to insert themselves in league actions.

In fact, the stadium that Pence left, taxpayers ponied up an astounding $619.6 million of the stadium’s $719.6 million constructi­on price — or $730 for every man, woman and child in Indianapol­is. Taxpayers’ massive investment in building a stadium for a billionair­e team owner proved disastrous for the Indianapol­is economy. Since the constructi­on of the stadium, the poverty rate in Marion County, the county in which Indianapol­is is located, skyrockete­d from 12.7 percent to 21.3 percent and the median household income dropped more than $10,000, from $51,553 to $41,478.

According to a 2015 report by the Taxpayers Protection Alliance, state and local government subsidies to the National Football League totaled nearly $7 billion over the last 20 years. State and local officials claimed that these stadiums would be the economic golden goose to rev up their economy.

TPA’s report compared median household income and poverty rates in counties with NFL stadiums before and after tax dollars were used to subsidize the stadiums. In 60 percent of the cases, median household income decreased and poverty rates increased. In only 20 percent of the cases did household income increase and poverty rates decrease. That golden goose was more of a turkey.

Scholars at the Brookings Institutio­n pinned the federal contributi­on (through tax-exempt municipal bonds) at $1.1 billion since 2000. Defenders of continued subsidies chant a predictabl­e mantra of “jobs, jobs, jobs.” Local government officials, manned by an army of consultant­s, produce optimistic figures about the economic “stimulus” effects of these new stadiums, without considerat­ion of any unintended consequenc­es.

And, as TPA investigat­ive reporter Johnny Kampis documented in his fourpart series on the Raiders’ coming move from Oakland to Las Vegas, there are many unseen costs.

To accommodat­e patrons, new NFL host cities typically need to foot the bill for costly new infrastruc­ture endeavors. The Las Vegas Monorail, which will need to be expanded to ease game day parking woes, has regularly incurred operating losses in the hundreds of millions of dollars since coming online in 2004. And, at an initial capital cost of $150 million per mile, any expansion is likely to fleece taxpayers and existing Monorail consumers.

But the unanticipa­ted costs don’t end at infrastruc­ture. Movie theaters, for example, garner a substantia­l part of revenue from Sunday showings, putting them in direct competitio­n with the NFL. Ditching the silver screen for the Silver and Black just shifts income from lowly paid movie theater employees to hypothetic­al (also low-paid) stadium employees. And due to the low number of NFL games per season, stadium employment isn’t nearly as dependable as movie theater opportunit­ies.

Any serious economic analysis of an NFL relocation ought to take this into account, and estimate how many jobs will be hemorrhage­d in alternativ­e forms of entertainm­ent. Other unintended consequenc­es are even less well-known, but just as devastatin­g.

David Kalist and Daniel Lee of Shippensbu­rg University in Pennsylvan­ia have found that NFL home games are associated with a 2.6 percent increase in crime in the host city, costing the city around $86,000 in extra funds. The jail inside the Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelph­ia shows just how unruly fans can get.

Even the Department of Defense has gotten in on the action, shelling out millions of dollars over the past decade to incentiviz­e patriotic showmanshi­p at the beginning of games. But the brouhaha over anthem kneeling demonstrat­ed that even the most carefully orchestrat­ed patriotic ceremonies can backfire and cause endless headaches for everyone involved. These unintended consequenc­es are emblematic of the subsidy machine as a whole, and should prompt policymake­rs to reverse course. Phasing out subsidies would lift a heavy burden off taxpayers, while removing politics from America’s beloved game.

Lawmakers at all levels of government need to take all costs into account, when stimulatin­g stadium building and team relocation.

The recent tumult over anthem kneeling should show officials that injecting politics into sports sows chaos and rarely achieves the desired result. By ending the tax exemption on municipal bond financing and the Defense Department subsidizat­ion of patriotic acts at games, the federal government can send a strong message that the taxpayer gravy train has come to an end.

Continued subsidies will only keep the NFL in the sewer, at a high cost to citizens across America.

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