The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Braves not Truist to their word

Bank and ballclub back at the taxpayer trough for more big breaks.

- Bill Torpy

The fact that the Atlanta Braves got a ton of cash from taxpayers to build their new ballpark is largely forgotten in the wake of the team’s World Series victory.

It’s now expected that sports teams will soak the public in the form of colossal subsidies when building ever more grandiose stadiums.

Socialism thrives when it comes to supporting the local team.

But there was an understand­ing when the Braves got $300 million-plus from Cobb County to construct its park: It was that the team, on its own nickel, would build all the affiliated restaurant­s, apartments and office towers — aka The Battery.

Mike Plant, the team’s developmen­t chief, promised this back in 2015 when he said, “We do not ask, nor do we intend to ask, for any incentives for the mixed-use part.” Well, that was then.

Last week, the Bravos were up at the plate again looking for a second helping of taxpayer love. The team and their friends at Truist, the mega-bank with a silly name, approached the Cobb Developmen­t Authority with the latest scheme: a 10-year property tax break to help build a $200 million, 250,000-squarefoot office tower overlookin­g Truist Park. The new building would house 1,000 employees, most of whom probably would be coming from its Buckhead location.

One of the developmen­t authority board members, a spoilsport named Karen Hallacy, reminded Plant of his promise. She then asked, “How does that fit into this coming in and the Braves basically asking for tax abatements on the property?”

Now, Plant is no dummy. He’s part of the crew that convinced Cobb officials that writing a $300 million-plus check was a good idea.

“We’re not asking for (the tax breaks),” Plant responded. “Truist is.”

Actually, the Braves own the land and Truist would be renting offices built there. Plant said that offices these days must be “amenitized” or workers will just stay home in their pajamas.

So, even if by some legal contortion that Truist is actually the one asking for the tax abatements, the arrangemen­t is to allow the Braves to luxuriate the building and make it more affordable to the bankers while the Braves earn a nice buck on the rent.

Bruce Mccall, an attorney representi­ng both Truist and the Braves Developmen­t Company, told authority members a request for tax abatement would be coming. The amount for such a tax break is still unknown. An office tower nearby, built by TK Elevator, got about $15 million worth in 2018.

Mccall said Truist is “committed to this area,” but he hinted it might depend on the authority’s largesse.

“Truist Financial Corporatio­n is a business,” he said. “They need to look at what they can do, where they can go, and they need to look at total costs. And this helps.”

It’s a truism of business: If you get a healthy tax cut or if someone else pays (i.e., the rest of Cobb’s taxpayers), then you make more money.

Developmen­t Authority Chair Clark Hungerford chimed in with his own verbal gymnastics to explain why the Braves weren’t reneging on their promise. He insisted the new tower would not technicall­y be inside The Battery.

“The commitment, if I’m not mistaken, was for The Battery,” he ventured. “And this piece of property that we’re talking about, even though it’s close, it’s not the same piece of property.”

It was a courageous stab at revisionis­m. Just this month, the Braves and Truist issued a press release announcing that the bank’s securities sector was moving to a building “inside The Battery Atlanta.”

The release repeatedly noted the new HQ would be “in” The Battery. Plant himself was quoted saying, “We are thrilled to welcome our partner Truist to The Battery Atlanta.”

He didn’t say “near” or “around the corner from” The Battery.

It reminds me of when Bill Clinton tried to wriggle out of the Lewinsky affair, saying, “It depends on what the meaning of the word ‘is’ is.”

I understand that businesses sometimes need all they can get to survive. The Braves and Truist are, no doubt, hanging on by a thread. So, I checked to see how dire it is.

Last year’s championsh­ip run brought in $568 million in revenue to the Braves, according to team owner Liberty Media. That’s up 19% from the previous high of $476 million in pre-pandemic 2019.

Braves Holdings’ 2021 operating profit before depreciati­on and amortizati­on was $111 million, Liberty Media said.

Now, you can almost hear the Braves’ suits shouting, “Hey, we had an operating profit of only $31 million after depreciati­on and amortizati­on!”

But while the accountant­s were busy depreciati­ng and amortizing, the Braves organizati­on was soaring in value, up $225 million last year to $2.1 billion, according to Forbes’ annual preseason analysis.

That’s not bad for an org that was worth about $450 million in 2007 when Liberty Media acquired the team in a byzantine tax saving transactio­n.

Also, Forbes’ estimate of the team’s value may be understate­d because its analysis didn’t include the Braves’ real estate investment­s, like The Battery.

How is Truist doing? you might ask.

Well, it reported $6 billion in net income for 2021. And in January, Truist CEO Bill Rogers said the costs of merging BB&T and Suntrust into the mega-bank with a silly name will be ebbing this year, doubtlessl­y allowing the company to greater profits.

So, please consider all that, Cobb Developmen­t Authority members, when Truist and the Braves return with hats in hand looking for a handout.

 ?? BEN GRAY FOR THE AJC/2021 FILE ?? The Braves, in acquiring a $300 million-plus tax break in 2015 to build their playground in Cobb County, promised they wouldn’t return to ask taxpayers for another helping.
BEN GRAY FOR THE AJC/2021 FILE The Braves, in acquiring a $300 million-plus tax break in 2015 to build their playground in Cobb County, promised they wouldn’t return to ask taxpayers for another helping.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States