The Arizona Republic

Fans could be taxed for upgrades to Chase Field

- Laurie Roberts

The Arizona Diamondbac­ks may be losing on the field, but the team had a grand slam of a week at the state Capitol.

Not only were team owners given exclusive rights this week to run a multimilli­on-dollar sports betting operation, but the Arizona Senate approved a plan to tax fans to pay for stadium improvemen­ts.

The Senate also agreed to lend the team the state’s credit rating so it can finance the upgrades with low-interest government bonds.

Nice assist, if you can get it. But, of course, your rank-and-file business owner who doesn’t field a profession­al sports team can’t get it.

Just like you can’t bid for the chance to win one of those 10 lucrative state licenses to run a sportsbook.

Diamondbac­ks lawyer Nick Wood says the team isn’t looking for a handout, merely a financial structure that will allow it to make major improvemen­ts to Chase Field.

“We’re taxing ourselves,” he told the Senate Finance Committee last month.

By which he meant they’re planning to hit fans with a 9% tax on tickets and anything else they buy at the ballpark or a nearby hotel the team hopes to build inside what will become the Diamondbac­ks’ “theme park.”

It is apparently not enough that we built the team a place to play, now the team expects us to rebuild the joint.

House Bill 2835 would expand the state’s definition of a “theme park district” to cover sports facilities. Basically, it allows for setting up a government authority to collect a sales tax within the district to build new features or pay for improvemen­ts and to issue low-interest municipal bonds to finance the work.

The 9% levy would be on top of the 8.6% sales tax that goes to fund government operations.

Neither the team spokesman nor the bill’s sponsor, Rep. Regina Cobb, RKingman, returned a call to talk about the need for bill.

The Arizona Tax Research Associatio­n, which generally is allergic to public subsidies for private businesses, registered as neutral on the bill. ATRA's Sean McCarthy points out that the 9% tax will eat into what the DBacks can charge for everything from tickets to T-shirts, meaning it's really the team that is paying for the improvemen­ts to the county-owned stadium.

“We’re not in the business of trying to help profession­al ballclubs access public terms for their stadiums,” McCarthy told me. “However, this (Chase Field) is already a public asset. County taxpayers paid for it, we own it and we have liability in it.”

Not everybody is on deck to support the D-Backs’ plan to zing fans. Sen. Michelle Ugenti-Rita, R-Scottsdale,

pointed out that most businesses plan ahead for tenant improvemen­ts rather than expecting the government to give them a hand.

She questioned who would be on the hook if the taxing district defaults on the bonds, though supporters of the bill assure people that would never happen.

“What this is going to do is establish a district so that a sports entity can utilize the credit worthiness of the state for their own personal benefit,” Ugenti-Rita said, during Tuesday’s Senate debate on the bill.

“The taxpayers already paid for the stadium and now we have to pay for the improvemen­ts?”

In a word: Yep. That is, if we actually want to attend an event in the ballpark we built.

The bill cleared the Senate on a 23-7 vote. After one final House vote next week, it’ll be on its way to Gov. Doug Ducey, who will surely sign it.

On the plus side, at least the D-Backs aren’t trying to force all taxpayers to foot the bill for better digs. The only people who will be soaked this time are the ones who go to games.

On the minus side, why oh why can’t the Diamondbac­ks be like every other business and set aside some of the team's revenue for the upgrades inevitably needed?

Just this week, Gov. Doug Ducey signed a bill allowing the team the exclusive rights to run one of 10 off-reservatio­n bookie operations in the state, a sweetheart of a deal that'll leave them awash in cash.

Just last month, Forbes released its Major League Baseball team values for 2021. The D-Backs are worth $1.32 billion, up 2% from last year.

Not bad for a team that Ken Kendrick bought for $238 million in 2004.

And he needs me to take out a bank loan to buy a beer and a hot dog?

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