The Mercury News

Carson approves stadium plan

Council vote keeps Raiders/ Chargers projectmov­ing

- The Los Angeles Times contribute­d to this report.

CARSON — The Carson City Council on Tuesday night unanimousl­y voted to clear the path for a proposed $ 1.7 billion stadium near Los Angeles that could become the shared home to the Raiders and the San Diego Chargers.

The 3- 0 vote marks a significan­t step forward for plans to lure the NFL back to the Los Angeles area after two- decades without a team in the nation’s second- largest media market.

The next moves now belong to the teams, and to the league.

Under current rules, the next opportunit­y for a team to file to relocate would be in January 2016. Any decision to move would have to clear a tangle of league hurdles, including winning the support of at least 24 of the 32 teams.

Representa­tives of the project will update a committee of NFL owners on their progress Wednesday during a meeting in New York.

Tuesday, Mayor Albert Robles likened the absence of the NFL in greater Los Angeles to the state’s deep drought.

“There are two things that are needed here in Southern California,” Robles said after the vote. “One of them is rain ... the other is football. And today, hopefully, we took care of that, because football is coming to Carson.”

The vote came with a loud cheer from a crowd dotted with Raiders jerseys and Chargers banners, and faced virtually no opposition from the room. Supporters of the Carson project needed just eight days to collect more than 15,000 signatures in support of their ballot initiative, almost twice the number required.

Mike Haynes, who played for the then- L. A. Raiders in their 1984 Super Bowl title year and also grew up in the area, spoke strongly in favor of the stadium.

“It might not be too long ‘ til sometime another local kid will have an opportunit­y to play in a Super Bowl right down the street from

An artist's rendering offers a glimpse of the proposed NFL stadium in Carson. here,” Haynes said.

The standing- roomonly council meeting resembled a pep rally. Team officials, union leaders and fans in Raiders and Chargers jerseys all urged the council to approve the stadium.

“We don’t need a vote,” said Felix Hernandez, clad in the black No. 81 jersey of Raiders Hall of Famer Tim Brown. “The community has spoken. Football needs to come back to Los Angeles.”

Hernandez then turned to the crowd and chanted: “Bring them back! Bring them back!”

Council members could have opted to put the issue before Carson voters, but instead chose to approve it outright themselves as state law allows.

The Carson project is one of two stadium proposals to surface in the Los Angeles area this year: St. Louis Rams owner Stan Kroenke is part of a group planning to build an 80,000- seat stadium in Inglewood, roughly 10 miles from downtown Los Angeles.

The sudden rush to Los Angeles is tempered by a 20- year history of disappoint­ment for fans. A string of stadium proposals have come and gone since the Rams and the Raiders fled Southern California after the 1994 season. Last month, the Anschutz Entertainm­ent Group spiked plans for a field in downtown Los Angeles, although Mayor Eric Garcetti has suggested that it could be revived.

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