Lodi News-Sentinel

Report dissects A’s ballpark plan

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Annie Sciacca and David DeBolt

OAKLAND — A crucial environmen­t report outlining what it will take for the Oakland A’s to build a 35,000-seat waterfront ballpark doesn’t contain any “show stoppers,” according to team President Dave Kaval.

The exhaustive report, released Friday, details the impact a ballpark developmen­t that includes housing, offices and a hotel would have on everything from traffic congestion to air quality to noise to safety.

Kaval said he’s now watching for an upcoming Court of Appeals ruling on whether the environmen­tal review approval process can be fast-tracked, as a lower court decided. Any decision prolonging the process “would kill the project,” he said.

A court-ordered delay would also raise questions over where, if not Howard Terminal near the Port of Oakland, the A’s would build a ballpark. And it raises the specter that the team which now owns half of the Coliseum site, could look outside Oakland.

Those are a lot of ifs, that on a day fans have long-awaited, Kaval did not wish to discuss in detail, except to say the team is committed to and excited about the Howard Terminal ballpark.

“If you read the content, there are really not any show stoppers in this environmen­tal impact report,” he said in a phone interview from spring training in Arizona. “Sometimes when you do a report like this it becomes obvious that certain things are just not going to happen. That’s not what this is about. A lot of these key areas that people have a lot of concerns about, there’s a defined plan to show how these things can be handled appropriat­ely.”

According to the environmen­tal report released Friday, it would take two years after approval to complete the ballpark, up to 540 housing units, small portions of the planned retail and commercial space, and the hotel rooms. A dozen of the project site’s 55 acres would be outdoor park space.

Once built out, the estuary site near the Port of Oakland and Jack London Square would have 3,000 residences, up to 1.5 million square feet of commercial office space and 270,000 square feet of retail or dining. It would also include an indoor performanc­e venue that could accommodat­e 3,500 people, up to 400 hotel rooms and more than 18 acres of open space.

No specific date was given for completion of the entire project.

Among the project’s impacts that could not be mitigated to a “less than significan­t” level is the noise that would be created by ballpark operations.

Also, pedestrian­s, cyclists or those driving into the ballpark area would have to cross over the railroad tracks on Embarcader­o, exposing them to some safety risk, although plans call

for upgrading the railroad crossings at an estimated cost of $13 million.

The report also says the ballpark developmen­t would lead to more traffic on Interstate 880 in the northbound direction between 23rd Avenue and Embarcader­o, Highway 24 eastbound between Broadway and Highway 13, the Posey Tube and the Webster Tube that each connect Oakland and Alameda, and Market Street.

The project would have a total of 8,900 parking spots, according to the report, but about 6,900 would be for the commercial and residentia­l uses of the complex. About 2,000 of the spaces would be shared between the ballpark and the indoor performanc­e venue.

The A’s are privately financing the project, according to Kaval speaking on behalf of owner Jon Fisher, and have not said how much it will cost.

The environmen­tal impact report will be used by the Oakland City Council in determinin­g whether to approve the project, but it’s not the only hurdle the project must clear.

Earlier this month, an Alameda County Superior Court judge dismissed a lawsuit filed by the Pacific Merchant Shipping Associatio­n, the Harbor Trucking Associatio­n, the California Trucking Associatio­n and Schnitzer Steel Industries, Inc. that would have prevented the project from being built under a fast-track process.

It was a win for supporters of the project, but the plaintiffs have filed an appeal. Critics of the proposed ballpark project have said it would hurt neighborin­g businesses and prompt longtime port tenants to leave, costing jobs.

Kaval said the appeal “poses an existentia­l crisis for the entire endeavor” but he is optimistic the A’s will prevail at the Court of Appeals level.

Kaval hopes the project receives approval this year, keeping the A’s on track with opening the ballpark as early as 2023, a year before their lease at the Coliseum expires.

“What I’ve been saying from the beginning is that we are 100 percent focused on getting this project approved at the waterfront. This is where we feel our future is. We are going to do everything we can do to bring that to a head this year. We need a vote, our lease is expiring in 2024 at the Coliseum so we can’t play there forever and we just need to go. We are hopeful that these things can come together and we can get a positive affirmativ­e vote and none of this additional litigation gets in the way.”

The Coliseum site already has environmen­tal clearance, but the A’s have made it clear their focus is on developing a property closer to the heart of the city, following a trend of other successful profession­al sports stadiums and arenas.

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