Friday, August 17. 2007
Field of Schemes
Sonics co-owner: We wanted OKC all along - wait, are you writing this down?
August 14, 2007
"Throw another move threat on the fire: Yesterday, Seattle Sonics minority owner (and billionaire natural gas mogul) Aubrey McClendon told the Oklahoma City Journal Record that he was 'under a self-imposed gag order' regarding operations of the team - then yammered at length about it, including the statement: 'We didn't buy the team to keep it in Seattle; we hoped to come here. We know it's a little more difficult financially here in Oklahoma City, but we think it's great for the community and if we could break even we'd be thrilled.'" . . . | more
Continue reading "Stadium subsidy news from Seattle & New York"
Monday, August 6. 2007
By Dave Zirin
Minneapolis-Saint Paul is the last place on earth I would have expected a "structurally deficient bridge" to collapse, but it happened. As sure as the levees broke in New Orleans, the bridge is no more. Now the state of Minnesota is living a nightmare where people I speak with are alternately devastated and furious: two parts tears, one part rage, with the ratio shifting by the hour.
Continue reading "Even in Minnesota: When Domes Attack"
Monday, July 9. 2007
by Dave Zirin
"You can't throw money at the problem." As a former public school teacher in Washington, I heard this cliche from countless bureaucrats. It was code for "Stop whining about ancient textbooks and prehistoric classroom materials, because there is no money." Imagine my shock when the city announced it would be spending more than $500 million on a new baseball stadium. Clearly when it comes to the needs of billionaire sports owners, there always seems to be money available to be thrown.
Continue reading "Stadium-building as a substitute for urban policy"
Monday, April 9. 2007
(League of Fans' Washington Post letter to the editor)
The City's Verizon Center Perk
Washington Post, Letter to the Editor
Monday, March 21, 2007; Page A12
Regarding "Wizards Owner's $50 Million Request Gets Initial Approval" [ Metro, April 4]:
If public investment in pressing city needs were to guarantee the District's elected leaders free luxury suites at sports venues, maybe such problems would actually get some attention.
Continue reading "Verizon Center Kickback for DC Officials"
Monday, April 2. 2007
(from the March 29 Domestic Policy Subcommittee, Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing: "Build It and They Will Come: Do Taxpayer-Financed Sports Stadiums ... Deliver as Promised for America's Cities?")
Witness Testimony:
Mr. Neil deMause, author of Field of Schemes: How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money Into Private Profit
Mr. Frank Rashid, waged an unsuccessful 10-year campaign to save Tigers' Stadium in Detroit.
Continue reading "Congressional testimony on taxpayer-financed stadiums"
Wednesday, March 28. 2007
Media Advisory
"Build It and They Will Come: Do Taxpayer-Financed Sports Stadiums, Convention Centers and Hotels Deliver as Promised for America's Cities?"
Thursday, March 29, 2007, Room 2247 Rayburn, 10:30 a.m.
Domestic Policy Subcommittee, Oversight and Government Reform Committee
This hearing will examine the promises of economic prosperity that are made to cities which finance professional sports stadiums, convention centers and hotels.
Continue reading "House subcommittee hearing to examine promises of prosperity made to obtain taxpayer-financed stadiums from cities"
Friday, January 19. 2007
As reported by Neil deMause of Field of schemes, "The British bank Barclays has tied the New York Mets' record $20 million a year naming rights deal [with Citigroup] with a reported 20-year, $400 million contract to dub the new Brooklyn Nets arena the Barclays Center."
Writing for The Brooklyn Paper, Gersh Kuntzman and Dana Rubinstein outline Barklays' rap sheet, which includes being founded on the slave trade, collaborating with the Nazis, doing business with South Africa's apartheid government, and fueling the civil war in the Congo.
Continue reading "Nets arena to be named after bank founded on slave money"
Wednesday, January 17. 2007
Leading up to the Super Bowl, an Online Journal commentary by Jason Miller compares the NFL to U.S. domestic and foreign policy -- and thereby football fans to the U.S. population -- in a challenge to the masses. He writes: "Arising from the same fetid bogs of spiritual decay that spawned the American Way, the NFL reeks with the stench of corporate tyranny, patriarchy, racism, superficiality, greed, competitiveness, and materialism."
Continue reading "The NFL, U.S. policy, and complicity of the masses"
Friday, January 12. 2007
Two recent articles from the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times examine the big business of college football and question the tax-breaks and non-profit status enjoyed by athletic departments involved in an arms race of spending on stadiums and coaches.
Continue reading "Tax breaks, non-profit status used for college football arms race"
Thursday, November 9. 2006
Victory! Voters in both Seattle, WA and Sacramento, CA went against sports team owner demands for corporate welfare in ballot measures on Tuesday, November 7. Field of Schemes has the breakdown:
Continue reading "Two big Nov. 7 victories against taxpayer subsidies for team owners"
Tuesday, October 17. 2006
(Letter co-signed by: Jim Bouton, former Yankee pitcher and author of Ball Four; Ralph Nader, consumer advocate and author; Neil deMause, co-author of Field of Schemes; Dave Zirin, columnist for SLAM magazine and author of What's My Name, Fool?; Robert Weissman, director of Essential Action and co-author of Corporate Predators; and Shawn McCarthy, director of League of Fans.)
Council of the District of Columbia
Dear Council member:
The District baseball boondoggle is swirling out of control at an ever accelerating pace.
Continue reading "DC Council Urged to 'Stop the Hemorrhaging' of the Stadium Project"
Monday, October 16. 2006
(Ralph Nader's Washington Post letter to the editor on DC Mayor Williams' plan to increase public spending on stadium.)
Ballpark Bait and Switch
Letter to the Editor - Washington Post: Page A20
In the Oct. 7 editorial "Don't Doff the Spending Cap," The Post rightly advised the D.C. Council to reject Mayor Anthony A. Williams's play for $75 million more from taxpayers for the stadium project.
Continue reading "Ballpark Bait and Switch"
Friday, September 8. 2006
The Honorable Adrian Fenty
Council of the District of Columbia
Dear Mr. Fenty:
With the primaries fast approaching, many voters are waiting for a plan as to what you would do to fix the baseball stadium mess should you become the Mayor of the District of Columbia.
Continue reading "Nader to DC mayoral candidate Fenty: Do you have a plan to fix the stadium mess?"
Thursday, August 24. 2006
George M. Steinbrenner III
Owner, New York Yankees
Dear Mr. Steinbrenner:
So you want to be the man who tears down "the House That Ruth Built." And for what? More profit.
Neither you, nor the city government you pressured, nor anyone else should ever do this to a place so rich in history and tradition as Yankee Stadium. Would the city ever tear down Carnegie Hall? Adding wasteful insult to senseless injury, you command hundreds of millions of dollars in public subsidies and primary neighborhood parkland to support a new impostor stadium.
Continue reading "Nader to Steinbrenner: Don't tear down Yankee Stadium"
Monday, August 7. 2006
After the first "Faith Day," the Atlanta Braves have asked promoters Third Coast Sports to not include Focus on the Family in the Braves' two other Faith Day events.
Continue reading "Focus on the Family left off future Braves' "Faith Day" events"
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