Los Gatos Weekly Times

Santa Clara says 49ers owe millions in rent

- By Darren Sabedra dsabedra@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

SANTA CLARA >> The spat between the city of Santa Clara and the San Francisco 49ers escalated last week when the city’s stadium authority board voted unanimousl­y to seek about $5 million in unpaid rent from the team.

The 49ers have told the city they are not paying 20% of this season’s bill because the coronaviru­s pandemic caused the cancellati­on of two exhibition games at Levi’s Stadium, City Attorney Brian Doyle said.

But there’s no provision in the lease agreement that gets the 49ers off the hook as a result of the National Football League’s cancellati­on of the entire preseason schedule, he added.

Emails to Al Guido, president of the 49ers Stadium Management Co., and Rahul Chandhok, the 49ers vice president of public affairs and strategic communicat­ions, were not returned.

In a closed session Sept. 8, the city’s stadium authority board — comprised of Mayor Lisa Gillmor and the City Council — approved filing an arbitratio­n claim to recover the lost money from the team. It is unclear who will arbitrate the case.

The city says the 49ers owe approximat­ely $2.7 million now and it anticipate­s the figure to climb to about $5 million by the end of September.

The board’s decision to file for arbitratio­n comes five days before the 49ers open their season at home against the Arizona Cardinals and caps a tumultuous off-season between the city and the team.

In February, the council voted unanimousl­y to end an agreement that allows the 49ers to operate the stadium for home games and other NFL events. But because the team and city are engaged in litigation, the 49ers’ management of the facility has not changed.

“The courts are pretty clogged up with COVID and other things,” Doyle said Sept. 8. “It’s not going as quickly as we’d like it to go.”

The city and team have been battling each other for years, with the most recent dispute surfacing in late July when city manager and stadium authority executive director Deanna Santana wrote a letter to the community claiming the 49ers have not complied with a voter-approved measure that prohibits taxpayer money from being spent on stadium authority maintenanc­e and operating costs.

She wrote that the team owes the city $1.1 million for public safety services.

Santana also noted the 49ers in June demanded that the city pay $2,741,014 within four days to recover losses incurred in the 201920 fiscal year.

“The 49ers demanded these funds without providing any supporting records or detailed informatio­n that substantia­ted these losses.” she wrote.

The city did not pay, and the team’s demand was presented to the stadium authority board on July 14. The board agreed to table the matter until it could confirm the amount, according to Santana.

Doyle said Tuesday the matter remains unresolved.

Santana added in her letter that non-nfl fiscal year losses, which included events such as the Pac-12 football championsh­ip and Monster Jam truck show, occurred before the coronaviru­s pandemic led to shelter-in-place orders and exposed the 49ers’ practice of booking money-making events.

She said the team had estimated the stadium authority would make about $18,000 in revenue by the end of last fiscal year.

The 49ers blasted Santana’s claims. In a statement to local media outlets at that time, they said Santana and Gillmor were “cherry-picking numbers entirely out of context and relying on fuzzy math.” The team says it generated $68 million in revenue for the stadium authority just in the past year alone.

The 49ers added that “any losses related to those events are due to Ms. Santana pushing excessive costs” onto the stadium authority and “creating enough dysfunctio­n” to upset major concert performers.

Pop star Ed Sheeran canceled a Levi’s Stadium tour stop, scheduled for the summer of 2018, because of the city’s 10 p.m. midweek concert curfew.

And last year, Rolling Stones officials called out the city for over-regulation and micromanag­ement after the legendary band’s Levi’s Stadium show.

“The touring industry has made note of the difficulti­es and uncertaint­ies presented by the City and eventually will just skip your market,” Michael Wozniak, the band’s security coordinato­r, wrote in a letter to Levi’s Stadium general manager Jim Mercurio.

The city pulled the plug on the concert’s pyrotechni­c show at the last minute, requested the band’s structural engineer to travel to Santa Clara to inspect the stage and did not allow stadium catering to feed the performers, Rolling Stones officials said.

Santana blamed the 49ers, telling this news organizati­on in an email last September that the team “brought issues very late to the city’s attention.”

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