"At the end of the day, boys, you don't tell me how rough the water is, you bring in the ship." – Steve Stone
A Goat Riders Affiliate

Wrigley Rooftop Directory
Ryne Sandberg Fan Page
"Just Sayin..." Archives
Vine Line Tid-bits
The Cubs Prayer
Cubs Calendar
Jim Hendry Page
Baseball Owner Reviews
Baseball Business Essays
TheCubdom Hall of Cubs


Cubs Blog Army

Recent Blog Updates

Editor's Pick:

Another Cubs Blog
Bleed Cubbie Blue
Cub Reporter
Cub Town
Desipio Media Ventures
Ghost of Paul Noce
Goat Riders of the Apocalypse
Hire Jim Essian!
Ivy Chat
TheCubdom
Thunder Matt's Saloon
View From the Bleachers
WGN-TV Baseball Blog

Honorable Mention:

A League of Her Own
Agony and Ivy
Baseball Diamond News
Boys of Spring
The Brickyard
Bugs & Cranks
Church of Baseball
College of Idiots
Cubs f/x
Cubs Hot Stove
Cubs Hub
CubsNet.com
Cubs Obsession
Gonfalon Cubs
Kosuke Fukodome
Lollygaggers
The Other Fifteen
The Ted Lilly Fan Club
Temporary Bleachers
TheCubsfan.com
Wrigleyville23

Cubs Sites:

Desipio Boards
North Side Baseball
Cubscast.com
Inside the Ivy
The Heckler
Ryne Sandberg Fan Page
Cubs Rooftop Directory

Just Read 'em!

Baseball Analysts
Baseball Musings
Baseball Prospectus
Baseball Think Factory
Hardball Times

Conglomerates

Baseball Toaster
Most Valuable Network
SportsBlog Nation

NL Central

BellyItcher STL
The Birdwatch STL
Brew Crew Ball MIL
Bucs Dugout PIT
CardNilly STL
Crawfish Boxes HOU
Honest Wagner PIT
Red Hot Mama CIN
Red Reporter CIN
Viva El Birdos STL

NL East

Amazin Avenue NYM
Capitol Punishment WAS
Citizens Blog PHI
Federal Baseball WAS Fish Stripes FLA
The Good Phight PHI
Sabernomics ATL

NL West

6-4-2 LAD, LAA
AZ Snake Pit AZ
Dodger Thoughts LAD
Ducksnorts SD
El Lefty Malo SF
Gas Lamp Ball SD
McCovey Chronicles SF
Only Baseball Matters SF
Purple Row COL

AL East

Batters Box TOR
Bronx Banter NYY
Camden Chat BAL
DRays Bay TB
Futility Infielder NYY
Joy of Sox BOS
Mile High Yankees NYY
Over the Monster BOS
Pinstripe Alley NYY
Replacement Level Yankees Weblog NYY

AL Central

Aaron's Baseball Blog MIN
Bless You Boys DET
Let's Go Tribe CLE
Royals Review KC
South Side Sox CHW
Sox Machine CHW
Tiger Blog DET
Twins Geek MIN

AL West

Athletics Nation OAK
Catfish Stew OAK
Halo's Heaven LAA
Lone Star Ball TEX
Lookout Landing SEA
USS Mariner SEA

Miscellany

Beyond the Boxscore
Minor League Ball
Torben Reviews

Chicago Sports

The Blackhawk Experience Blog-A-Bull
Section 8 Fire
Windy City Gridiron Bears

News Sources

Chicagosports.com
Cubs.com
MLB.com
Sun-Times Cubs
Daily Herald Sports
Daily Southtown Sports
BaseballReference.com

Request a link, or category change.

Caveat Emptor: Illinois Taxpayers

Friday, May 9, 2008

State, ISFA, Governor, Sam Zell trying one last time to steal from taxpayers.

There's been a lot of news on the Cubs sale front of late. The rumblings from many sources is that the 'books' will be sent out to the six prospective ownership groups in a week or two.

In what appears to be a last minute attempt to revive the ISFA deal, Jim Thompson (whom I'm losing respect for daily) is now promising that there will be no name change if the state buys Wrigley.

Wrigley Field, circa 1997

This raises two questions. Where's the revenue shortfall going to come from? (If the agency had been planning to sell naming rights, it was probably banking on some revenue.) Well, lets think about the ISFA. It's assets/income opportunities if it purchased the park would come from rent the club pays, concessions, other 'inside the ballpark' revenues, and tax dollars. Now, if there's any drop in 'inside the ballpark' revenues to the new owners, the club is devalued... so that doesn't make a lot of sense for Sam Zell. But, if the new revenues come from the taxpayers, well then everyone can eat the taxpayers' pie and so the new owners and the Tribune can have an extra helping of profit.

Similarly, Al Yellon recently had a sit down with Crane Kenney, the Cubs' interim-President. Here's what Crane had to say about taxpayer dollars being used by the ISFA.

All right, so I think we’ve already talked about the sources of funding for this transaction will come exclusively from inside this building. So what we would do is we would take what we call the transactional taxes that are paid here, sales taxes that are paid in the building on food, drink, merchandise, amusement taxes that are paid on ticket sales, use taxes, etc. Those taxes that are right now being paid inside the building for money being spent here, we would use a baseline year of 2007 and then all the incremental taxes that otherwise would have been paid into the general coffers above that baseline year would now go to support a bond issue which would renovate the stadium over 30 years.

So let me get this straight. What if I wanted to purchase Wrigley Field. Would the state really allow me to set a baseline year of tax payments and not increase those taxes for the next 30 years?

Let's do a little math here. I checked Team Marketing Report's Fan Cost Index, which they've released every year since 1991. In '91, the average Cubs ticket price was $10.10, and the FCI was $83.40 or $20.85 per person. (FCI is based on a family of four attending a game.)

For 2008, the Cubs average ticket price, according to TMR, is $42.49 and the FCI is $251.96 or $62.99 per person.

Assuming the tax rates didn't change from 1991 to 2008 (they did, but they went up), the tax authorities would have expected 12% of the ticket revenue (entertainment tax) and 10.5% (sales tax) of the rest. In other words, a fair estimate of per fan tax revenue in 1991 was (.12 x 10.10 + .105 x 10.75 =) $2.34 per person. The same estimate using the 2008 levels is (.12 x 42.49 + .105 x 20.50 =) $7.25. (Note that the above paragraph assumes the average fan spends at the FCI amount, but the FCI amount is not developed using average fan expenditures per game.

The final factor I'll look at is attendance. In 1991, attendance was 2,314,250. Let's assume 2008 attendance will be at the same level as 2007, or 3,252,462. Using our previous assumptions about tax per fan per game, that brings 1991 tax revenues to approximately $5.4 million and 2008 tax revenues to $23.6 million.

In other words, if the ISFA had purchased the stadium in 1991 using the same tax threshold they are suggesting now, the city/county/state authorities would receive $5.4 million of taxes from the Cubs this year and $18.2 million would be redirected to paying off bonds so the state could own Wrigley Field. That's $18.2 million that doesn't go to fix pot holes, hire police and firefighters, or replace broken streetlights in drug-infested neighborhoods.

If all of that seems like too many ifs, too many assumptions, let's run the numbers if the deal closes before the end of the season and they adopt 2007 as the baseline.

2007 FCI: 219.21 or $54.80 per person. Average ticket cost was $34.30. So tax revenues would be .12 x 34.30 + .105 x 20.50 = 6.27 per person. We assumed no change in attendance, so the difference is $7.25 - $6.27 = $0.98 per person x 3,252,462 = $3.2 million.

So just the incremental tax revenue from 2007 to 2008 is $3.2 million... and that assumption is on the low side because it doesn't factor in the hike in tax rates that occurred in 2008. (Thanks Todd Stroger Jr. and the CTA).

Thus, in it's first year, given the conditions Crane Kenney outlined for Al, the taxpayers would be subsidizing $3.2 million dollars of the Wrigley Field purchase price... and it would grow from there. I'd say write your governor, but Blagojevich is already a fan of corruption... so write your state representative, write your alderman, write your mayor. There's already enough corruption in Chicago politics. Illinois taxpayers don't need to subsidize Sam Zell.

Posted by Byron at May 9, 2008 11:23 AM

Comments


Post a comment




Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)

MORE "JUST SAYIN..."

TheCubdom

Just Sayin...

By: Byron Clarke


SPONSORED AD

TicketLiquidator is a Ticket Broker carrying Chicago Cubs Tickets and Chicago White Sox Tickets. We also have a large supply of Chicago Bulls Tickets, Chicago Bears Tickets and Chicago Blackhawks Tickets, in addition to Concert Tickets. Our inventory of Theater Tickets can't be beat, particularly our selection of Wicked Tickets and Chicago the Musical Tickets.

SPONSORED AD

Buy Football Tickets such as Euro 2008 Tickets, Euro 2008 Final Tickets, Champions League Tickets , FA Cup Tickets, Manchester United Tickets and many more tickets.

SHOP FOR TICKETS

Visiting the Chicago area? We’ve got the best Chicago Bears tickets, Cubs tickets and Blackhawks tickets. We’ve got the best White Sox tickets in Chicago and the best Bulls tickets in Chicago.

SPONSORED AD

Wrigley Field Seating Chart
Cubs Tickets
Chicago Event Tickets
White Sox Tickets
Yankees Tickets

10% off all tickets, use code: CUBDOM

SPONSORED AD

Chicago Cubs Tickets
Baltimore Orioles Tickets
St Louis Cardinals Tickets
Chicago Bears Tickets
US Open Tennis Tickets
Wicked Tickets
Spamalot Tickets

SPONSORED AD

Chicago Cubs Tickets
Chicago Bears Tickets
Wicked Tickets Chicago
Floyd Mayweather Tickets
Chicago Bulls Tickets
Red Sox Tickets

SPONSORED AD

Cheap Cubs Tickets
Cheap Bulls Tickets
Cheap Bears Tickets
Cheap Concert Tickets
Cheap Blackhawks Tickets
Cheap Red Sox Tickets

SPONSORED AD

Chicago Ticket Broker Vivid Seats, sells all the best tickets for your Chicago home base teams. Come watch the Bears at Soldier Field, White Sox at Comiskey and your Chicago Cubs. We also sell tickets for the Chicago Bulls and Blackhawks games. For more info hit up Vividseats.com today!

advertise@thecubdom.com


May 2008
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Search

Google
Web
TheCubdom.com

online
eXTReMe Tracker
Since Mar 18, 2004


Monthly Archives


Recent Entries


Powered by
Movable Type 3.33

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Copyright © 2004 - 2008 Byron Clarke
legal - about thecubdom.com - site index

 
      Gmail | MT