The Decatur Daily Democrat

Nevada Legislator­s weigh plan to put MLB stadium on Las Vegas Strip

- BY GABE STERN

CARSON CITY, Nev. — Lawmakers are considerin­g a proposal to finance and incentiviz­e constructi­on of a Major League Baseball stadium on the Las Vegas Strip, with an initial public hearing scheduled Monday at the Nevada Legislatur­e.

The plan would authorize up to $380 million in incentives for the potential $1.5 billion retractabl­e-roof stadium, mainly through state transferab­le tax credits and county bonds to help provide a home for the Oakland Athletics. The state would forgo up to $180 million in transferab­le tax credits, with a cap at $36 million per year. The $120 million in county bonds would help with constructi­on costs and be paid off gradually.

The proposal’s price tag and behind-thescenes negotiatio­ns have sparked debate about public subsidies and equity in state economic developmen­t efforts.

State lawmakers also are considerin­g billions of dollars in tax credits to bring major film studios to Las Vegas. The governor’s office of economic developmen­t has approved hundreds of millions of dollars in tax abatements for Tesla in efforts to broaden Nevada’s tourism and gaming-based economy.

The stadium financing bill was introduced late Friday night after more than a month of speculatio­n, as the A’s move away from Oakland appears increasing­ly imminent. As of Monday morning, it is already the most-commented on proposal this session with over 1,500 opinions — nearly three-quarters of which are in opposition.

Many proponents say that Las Vegas has an increasing capacity to support major league profession­al sports, and that bringing the Athletics to the Strip would add sustainabl­e jobs to an area hit especially hard by the pandemic. Opponents say the stadium is not worth hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies to bring another large corporatio­n on the Las Vegas Strip, especially as A’s management has switched proposed locations and drawn out negotiatio­ns for how much public assistance they are requesting.

The A’s have been looking for a home to replace the Oakland Coliseum, where the team has played since 1968 after departing Kansas City. The team previously sought to build a stadium in California at Fremont, then San Jose, and finally the Oakland waterfront — ideas that never materializ­ed.

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