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View Full Version : Maybe some good news for OKC landing the Sonics...



OklahomaTuba
1/20/2007, 05:46 PM
No way the state of Washington pays for this.


SEATTLE -- A delayed plan for a state-of-the-art arena in the Seattle suburbs that would seat approximately 18,500 and cost more than $500 million -- including $300 million from taxpayers -- will reach the state Legislature by month's end, SuperSonics and Storm owner Clay Bennett said on Thursday.

Bennett told The Associated Press the luxurious arena -- to be built in either Renton across the street from a retail development known as "The Landing," or in Bellevue along a business stretch called "Auto Row" -- would house the Sonics and Storm professional basketball teams, high-profile concerts and potentially national political conventions, college basketball's Final Four championships -- maybe even the Grammy Awards.

"What we have found is an extremely complex proposition," Bennett said of a plan he had intended to present to lawmakers at the beginning on their current session on Jan. 8.

The chief complexity? Money.

In a letter Bennett sent to Gov. Chris Gregoire Thursday and then shared with The Associated Press, the teams will ask for at least $300 million in public tax money be put toward the arena.

Bennett said he will ask the Legislature to authorize an extension of the one-half of one percent hotel, restaurant and rental car tax inside King County that baseball's Mariners used to help fund Safeco Field, which opened in 1999. He said the team will contribute its own money, though he said how much is still being determined.

Trent House, director of government affairs for the Washington Restaurant Association, said in Olympia, Wash., on Thursday that the restaurant tax was scheduled to run through 2015, but the Safeco Field construction bonds that the tax is helping to pay will expire in 2012.

"In our minds, we've done our part (after the plan is presented in Olympia in two weeks)," Bennett said. "It's up to leadership and the public to decide if this is what they want."

If they don't, Bennett reiterated he has "options" -- a clause in the $350 million purchase contract for the Sonics and Storm that Bennett signed last July which states if a new arena in the Seattle area is not agreed upon by Oct. 31, 2007, the teams can move to Oklahoma City. Which is the hometown of Bennett and his seven co-investors in the NBA's Sonics and WNBA's Storm.http://www.kirotv.com/sports/10787724/detail.html?rss=sea&psp=news