Las Vegas Review-Journal

Stadium details? Lips are sealed

Costs could top or go under $1.9B

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

The Oakland Raiders and local officials are no further along than they were a year ago in locking down a key aspect of the Las Vegas stadium project: how much it will cost.

It’s been widely reported that the domed stadium, scheduled to open in June 2020 just northwest of Interstate 15 and Russell Road, would cost $1.9 billion. But that figure remains nothing more than an estimate for the total cost of the stadium and a practice facility for the National Football League team, which earlier this year received league approval to move to Las Vegas. The reality is the projects’ total cost could be more or less than that amount.

The Raiders confirmed in

STADIUM

March that they had negotiated a loan with Bank of America for the stadium, a key element of approvals by the Las Vegas Stadium Authority and NFL owners for a conditiona­l lease agreement. But the team never shared a dollar amount or whether a revolving credit facility is involved in the financing.

Bank of America stepped in when Las Vegas Sands Chairman and

CEO Sheldon Adelson, who said he would put $650 million of his personal fortune into the project, exited his partnershi­p with the Raiders in January. Bank of America has never said whether it would cover that entire $650 million hole. And the public, which is funding $750 million of the stadium’s constructi­on costs via an increase in Clark County’s hotel room tax, has learned little about the arrangemen­t between the bank and the team.

Little more public informatio­n

Stadium Authority Board Chairman Steve Hill last week confirmed that the public won’t get much more informatio­n about the details of the loan, citing confidenti­ality granted to the bank and the team through Senate Bill 1, the legislatio­n that increased the room tax and establishe­d the stadium’s financing plan.

“A big part of the informatio­n that the board will get will be confidenti­al,” Hill told reporters after Thursday’s board meeting. “The Raiders’ financial situation is not going to be a public document, so we’ll get a framework for that at a board meeting, and individual board members will get a more thorough briefing outside of the public meeting.”

Hill explained that board members would be briefed individual­ly or in small groups and would not deliberate on decisions related to the financial package to operate within the bounds of the state’s open meeting law. He said the total cost of the stadium eventually would be disclosed, but not the details of the Raiders’ financing arrangemen­ts.

Jeremy Aguero of Las Vegas-based Applied Analysis, which serves as the staff for the authority board, said a public discussion would occur on whether the Raiders would be financiall­y capable of delivering on their commitment­s, but that won’t include specific financial informatio­n, particular­ly if the team deems it proprietar­y informatio­n that could hurt them competitiv­ely.

“I’m not going to opine or guess on what type of informatio­n is going to be provided and in what fashion or level of specificit­y, but there is a budget required for the project, and there is a requiremen­t the committee makes a finding of financial capability,” Aguero said. “Exactly how all that plays out will be at the discretion of the committee.”

The estimated $1.9 billion price on the stadium includes $100 million to build a practice facility and headquarte­rs for the team. The team has not identified a site for that facility or any details about its constructi­on, but several local government­s have expressed interest in having it within their boundaries.

The bill for the projects could come in under that figure if the team opts to spend less initially and add improvemen­ts over the 30-year duration of the lease agreement, or more if there are cost overruns. Some local constructi­on experts say the cost of labor may be higher than expected because of the numerous projects in Southern Nevada competing for laborers and craftsmen.

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, for example, is anticipati­ng higher labor costs for its $1.4 billion convention center expansion and remodeling project and is budgeting $114.9 million in contingenc­y funds to cover what the LVCVA’S contracted building representa­tive, Terry Miller of Cordell Corp., called “constructi­on industry compressio­n.” Cordell was backed up by the seven-member Oversight Panel for Convention Facilities in Clark County, which is monitoring the project.

Developer responsibl­e for overruns

Under Senate Bill 1, the stadium developer would be responsibl­e for any constructi­on cost overruns with one exception: an overrun caused by a change mandated by the stadium authority after the execution of the developmen­t agreement. The authority wouldn’t be responsibl­e for cost overruns if it mandates changes required by county building and safety codes.

The specifics of the Raiders’ contract with Minneapoli­s-based Mortenson Constructi­on also are unclear.

Raiders President Marc Badain acknowledg­ed in May that Mortenson, the company that recently built U.S. Bank Stadium for the Minnesota Vikings, was contracted for the job and that company has a working relationsh­ip with Henderson-based Mccarthy Building Cos. Inc.

The Raiders have not indicated whether they put the job out to bid or selected Mortenson based on its track record. U.S. Bank Stadium, like the proposed Las Vegas stadium, has a rigid roof structure. The contractor delivered that project ahead of schedule.

The Raiders and the stadium authority expect the Las Vegas project to be on a tight timeline. A stadium normally takes 32 to 40 months to build. The Las Vegas stadium is expected to be complete within 30 months. Groundbrea­king is expected late this year or early next year.

The Raiders did not respond to email inquiries about details of the project and its financing, and the team has told Mortenson, Mccarthy and architect David Manica not to respond to media inquiries.

The Review-journal is owned by the family of Las Vegas Sands Corp. Chairman and CEO Sheldon Adelson.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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