Yielding to rural Utah lawmakers resistant to see their tax dollars potentially pay for a Major League Baseball team in Salt Lake City, the Utah House on Tuesday passed a dramatically revised version of a bill to fund a new stadium and the surrounding entertainment district.
While the bill still authorizes the state to issue up to $900 million in bonds to build the stadium, how the bonds would be repaid is now unclear.
Gone is the hotel tax that would have been charged statewide and poured an estimated $38.4 million a year into the project. A tax on rental cars remains, but wonât take effect until Utah gets a Major League Baseball franchise and, even then, would generate only about $6 million a year.
âMore kids go to baseball with a ticket in their hand next to the ones that they love than any other sport in the world. Itâs made for us. Utah is made for baseball,â said Ogden Republican Rep. Ryan Wilcox. âWe have one shot here today. [If] we take it, we make ourselves prepared to keep ourselves on that short list if that opportunity presents itself. We can do that. Those memories will be ours with our grandkids, with our kids, into the future if we have the courage to make the hard choices.â
The newly created Utah Fairpark Area Investment and Restoration District along North Temple â where Gail Miller and the Larry H. Miller Co. are lobbying to locate a professional baseball team â would collect the state portion of new sales tax and property tax generated in the area and use it to subsidize the infrastructure and other amenities, like restaurants, hotels and bars in the area.
MLB is considering adding two teams and Utah and Nashville are reportedly frontrunners, but an announcement is not expected for a few years.
Even without a team, Rep. Sandra Hollins, D-Salt Lake City, who represents the Fairpark area, said her community is excited about the investment in the neighborhoods. The Millers estimate that their investment in the district would be $3.5 billion.
âWe know this is going to be a good thing,â she said. âThis is going to have a major impact on an area that has been neglected. … It is beyond Major League Baseball, which we absolutely welcome. This is about the economic impact and what itâs going to mean for the people I represent.â
The bill passed 51-11 in the House and goes to the Senate for consideration. A Senate committee heard testimony on the bill Tuesday but took no action. A final vote on the bill could come as early as Wednesday.
âWe anticipate that this development, which covers 200 acres of state-owned and a small amount of privately owned, to just lift the entire area and to be able to generate a lot of new economic activity and revenue from that,â Sen. Lincoln Fillmore, R-South Jordan, the Senate sponsor of the bill, said Tuesday. âAnd, you know, weâre going to be using largely that to be able to fund the development of that project.â
If a baseball team does come to Salt Lake City, Wilcoxâs bill mandates that its team name include âUtah,â rather than just âSalt Lake City.â
St. George Republican Rep. Walt Brooks, R-St. George said when the bill first was introduced he was a âhard no.â
âI could not vote for a bill thatâs going to increase taxes statewide for this support this issue,â he said Tuesday. âHowever, I really appreciate the sponsor and our leadership team who took our concerns and went to work and worked hard to come to a solution that really gets it to a place thatâs going to be a valuable asset to our community.â
A provision that would have earmarked part of the hotel tax increase to rural Utah emergency medical services and search and rescue operations â designed to win over rural legislators â was also removed from the version of the ballpark bill that passed the House Tuesday.
Representatives from southern Utah said House leaders had committed to readdressing that issue next year.
A separate bill to create a sports and entertainment district in downtown Salt Lake City and allocate roughly $1 billion in public financing to lure a National Hockey League team remained stalled in the Senate Tuesday.
â Tribune reporter Emily Anderson Stern contributed to this report.