NO to $700 Million: WRN's Alternative to the Milwaukee Brewers Plan
Our plan spends less money than Gov. Tony Evers and legislative Republicans but still meets the Brewers' maintenance request needs.
The Republicans' more than $700 million plan to maintain and renovate the Milwaukee Brewers' stadium should be a no-go. Gov. Tony Evers' plan is also a non-starter. We are proposing an alternative plan that meets the Brewers' maintenance needs, spends less, and reduces the pain on the state, City of Milwaukee, and Milwaukee County taxpayers.
This is all backwards. You'd expect Democrats and a Democratic governor to oppose handing millions of dollars to a rich company owner, yet here we are. You'd expect Republicans to propose spending LESS overall than Democrats, yet here we are. That being said, there are elements of the Republicans' plan that we really like, such as the "jock tax" concept. We retain them.
We would note that the Brewers asked for $428 million in a December 2022 consultant study (VSG) on maintenance and renovation requests. The Republican plan exceeds that by almost $300 million. We don't support that.
That report did say the stadium has been well-maintained. It's important to note that the maintenance needs are projected needs through 2040; the stadium is not currently falling apart. The consultants have studied many well-known stadiums.
Here's how the competing Brewers plans break down:
This is a VERY important distinction:
Republicans squeezed $100 million out of the Brewers and are demanding $202 million from the cash-strapped locals but then they added those contributions ON TOP of the VSG request. In other words, they expanded far beyond what even the Brewers were asking for. That's how they get to $714 million. Why give the Brewers more than they said they needed?
In contrast, our plan starts with the Brewers' VSG maintenance and renovation request but then subtracts the Brewer contribution and local contributions from it. Those contributions should go toward the maintenance request. We agreed with adding $25 million in winterization costs because winter events are projected to bring in significant revenue, so that made sense.
As a point of comparison, we would note that $250 million in public money was spent on the $524 million Bucks stadium (including $47 million from the city through tax incremental financing). Our plan is most in line with that precedent. For comparison purposes, the plan included $174 million from the Bucks' owners and $100 million from former Sen. Herb Kohl. (The state contribution to the Bucks was $160 million, but the state got $80 million back through a shared revenue reduction.) In 2021, it was estimated the Bucks' playoffs had a $58 million economic impact, and most people today are happy Fiserv exists. Our plan is closest.
Here's the tale of the tape on the competing Brewers plans. We tried to take the best elements of each plan.
The Republican Plan
Total: $714 million. State contribution: $386 million, winterization $25 million (Also paid for by the state), $100 million from the Brewers, $135 million from Milwaukee County, and $67.5 million from the City of Milwaukee. The Milwaukee and state contributions would be spread out annually, with the state contributions coming from players' income taxes.The Evers Plan
Total: $448 million. $290 million cash upfront from the state surplus, interest payments, and $70 million from the stadium board. Evers based the latter on the study conducted by the Brewers' consultant, but we are told that the stadium board has spent some of it, and they don't have the full $70 million anymore. Evers asked for NO money from locals or the Brewers, beyond what the Brewers already pay in rent ($1.2 million a year).WRN's Milwaukee Brewers Stadium Plan
Total: $447,700. Our plan includes the $100 million contribution from the Brewers but applies it to the maintenance request. It also includes $179 million from the state jock tax, $40 million in funding shifted from the Milwaukee Public Museum, $25 million for winterization from the state, $45 million from Milwaukee County (shifted from the museum), and $18.7 million from the City of Milwaukee (keeping the annual total the same as they are already paying for the old stadium). If the museum money can't be shifted, the county and city would still have to pay the amounts listed, but we've halved their contributions (on a percentage basis) from the Republican plan. We understand the temptation to say no public money should fund the stadium, but we do think the practical reality of such a pure stance would be that the Brewers would leave. We think having a major league baseball team is an asset to the state's economy as a whole. We grew up with the 1982 Brewers, and we believe the team is embedded in our state's psyche. According to the non-partisan Legislative Fiscal Bureau, income tax generated within the stadium district is estimated to total $666.5 million over the length of this lease. The GOP proposal will net the state roughly $242.9 million in income tax collections between now and 2050. We asked if the state could just sell the stadium to the Brewers for $1 to eliminate this problem down the road, but we're told that the Brewers wouldn't buy it. We started with the premise that it's good to keep the Brewers here. The team currently owns an undivided 35.77% interest in the stadium project and the Stadium District, an independent entity created by the state, currently owns an undivided 64.23% interest in the stadium project. That means if the Brewers leave, the state would basically own an empty stadium albatross. We spoke to state Rep. Rob Brooks, the Republican from Saukville who helped author the Republican plan. He said the Republican plan attempts to have $100 million left over in reserves at the end of 2050. While nice, we think tough choices have to be made and eliminated that provision. If the Brewers leave, the state will lose millions in revenue, he said. Brooks told us that Republicans are open to negotiating their numbers. We do like the Republican provision to change membership on the Stadium Board, which is currently dominated by Democratic appointees. The Republican goal is to put more people on the Board with construction experience and to balance out the political representation. This provision should be retained.How It All Breaks Down
In case you missed it, Gov. Tony Evers proposed his $448 million plan that included an upfront state cash "bailout" for the Brewers with zero contribution from them or local government. Republicans correctly rejected this, but they jacked up the price tag to more than $700 million by extending the lease duration, winterizing the stadium, and adding the hefty contributions from the locals and Brewers. Both plans are flawed, but the Republican plan has some very good elements that we want to retain. We poured through documents and conducted a series of interviews in an attempt to understand how the Republican figure ballooned from Evers' ask, which was based on the December 2022 study by a Brewers-commissioned consultant, VSG, which estimated $428 million in maintenance needs for the stadium through 2040. Evers tacked on an extra $20 million for inflation. Evers went with the VSG amount as the baseline, even though his Department of Administration commissioned a separate study that inflated that number even more. We are going with the more conservative VSG study amount, $428 million. After all, why should state taxpayers give the Brewers more than they asked for? Both the Democratic and Republican plans did this. We disagree. We also scrutinized the VSG and DOA study [American Family Field Assessment Review FINAL (1)] carefully. We understand there is a lease provision requiring the stadium district to pay for upgrades to keep up with other stadiums. Even so, some of the maintenance requests struck us more as wants than needs. For example, the VSG study notes that the clubhouse lacks a "wow" factor and also recommends creating new social spaces for young generation fans who, unlike older ones, don't want to sit in traditional seats to actually watch the game. [caption id="attachment_112478" align="alignnone" width="1024"] VSG study[/caption] [caption id="attachment_112480" align="alignnone" width="1013"] Passage from the VSG study[/caption] Our plan would require $5.3 million in savings, either from VSG's $428 million maintenance requests or from the winterization budget, or both. Below is the outline of how VSG is reaching its total. We suggest finding the savings in architecture and interiors or miscellaneous categories.Brewers Must Contribute $100 Million
There are things we really like about the Republican plan. For example, Evers asked Brewers' owner Mark Attanasio, who is worth $700 million (the team is worth $1.2 billion) to pony up exactly nothing. This is indefensible. We would note the governor just vetoed a tax cut on working-class Wisconsinites and retired folks. Yet now he wants to spend more state money to help a wealthy team owner while not expecting him to contribute a dime. Outrageous. We would also note that Attanasio is dealing with some issues that teams in larger cities don't have because of lower television ad revenue. We've never seen a detailed breakdown of Brewers' financials, however; Republicans should ask for one. The Republican plan includes a $100 million Brewer contribution, which we retain. We like the idea of an entertainment district around the stadium. Deal with it through a TIF.Milwaukee Contributions
At the same time, Republicans are demanding a combined $202 million from the City and County of Milwaukee, albeit through $2.5 million and $5 million annual contributions, respectfully. We believe the city and county should contribute something to the plan because they do get millions of dollars in sales tax from sales within the stadium. The city/county would lose that money if the Brewers leave, and that's a practical reality if no deal gets done. However, our plan HALVES the city/county contribution. We would note that the state just allowed the city/county to increase its sales tax (which hits the poor hardest) to avoid bankruptcy. It seems incongruent to acknowledge the locals are teetering on bankruptcy and then to take some of that money back through a large forced spending increase for a stadium whose fan base is only 22% of the city. We want Milwaukee to get its fiscal house in order; our plan gives them space to do that. Assembly Speaker Robin Vos baked a lot of great provisions into that sales tax bill to prevent them from frittering away the sales tax/shared revenue increases by preventing them from cutting law enforcement budgets or spending it on the trolley. That was great. The entire state benefits if Milwaukee succeeds. The Republican plan makes the wealthy team owner pay less than the state's poor county. That's wrong, and we fixed it. We have a divided government, so both sides are going to have to grasp the political realities and feelings of the other. We also understand the political reality; Republicans need to sell this to northern Wisconsin Republican legislators whose voters, in say Superior or Eagle River, won't necessarily understand why they need to pay for a baseball stadium six hours away. They may bolt with zero local contribution from Milwaukee; after all, they are the MILWAUKEE Brewers. We also grasp the political reality for Democrats; they aren't going to vote for the $202 million for locals in the current plan, and Democratic support is necessary to attain Gov. Tony Evers' signature. The Republican plan is dead without Evers' signature. Our plan offers a compromise. The city and county must have some skin in the game, but we've cut what the Republicans want them to pay in half. Furthermore, our plan provides them with a creative way to pay it to reduce the pain. Here's how:- City of Milwaukee: Members of the Milwaukee Common Council whipped out a press release that revealed they are already paying $1.1 million a year in debt service for the OLD stadium, through 2029. The Republican plan would make them pay $2.5 million a year on top of that. Evers makes them pay nothing. Our plan gives them a three-year moratorium and then requires them to pay $1.1 million a year for the duration of the plan. There would be three years of double payments, but, as noted, they do receive significant sales tax revenue. For most of our plan, the city would just pick up and continue paying the same amount once the old debt service runs out.
- Milwaukee County: We have a very creative approach to suggest to the Milwaukee County Board. The Republican plan makes the County pay $5 million a year; Evers makes the county pay none. We are asking for a $45 million contribution, which would amount to about $2.25 million a year. Thus, we are splitting the difference. However, we further suggest this:
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