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City leaders to start new arena dialogue

by Suzanne Hurt, published on March 8, 2011 at 6:58 PM

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This spring, city leaders expect to begin a new effort to determine whether the community will support public funding for a new arena – even if the Sacramento Kings leave, Mayor Kevin Johnson said Tuesday.

City officials plan to start a new discussion with the public after a development team presents an analysis and list of financing options to build a sports and entertainment center, he said.

The analysis is currently scheduled to be presented to the Sacramento City Council in May.

By that time, the Kings' future should be more certain. The Maloofs, who own a majority share of the team, are working on a deal to move the team to Anaheim before next season and are expected to discuss that with the NBA Board of Governors April 14-15. The team must request permission to move by April 18 under an NBA deadline extension.

Mistakes may have been made in past efforts to build a new arena in Sacramento, Johnson said.

"I think it was a mistake if we framed it a few years ago like we were building something for the Kings.... It should not have been just about them," he said in a Tuesday morning press conference at City Hall. "I think the public felt it was something that was being jammed down their throats."

The ICON-Taylor team had agreed to provide the city with two analyses – one with the Sacramento Kings as the major tenant and one without the team.

The developers may only be able to conduct the latter analysis because the Maloofs have said they will only provide the Kings’ financial information if the team stays.

Johnson suggested the community may be more likely to support building a new arena if the Kings and Maloofs are out of the picture.

"I think the public feels a lot better now knowing it's not only about the Kings, it's really about us as a community," he said. "The fact that we may be on the brink of losing our team and the key variable in this is an arena.... The public understands that in a different way."

However, the community would be losing a "major employer" without the Kings and an arena, he said.

During the press conference, two people who work at the Kings' home arena in Natomas, recently renamed the Power Balance Pavilion, said they and their families would suffer if the Kings left and a new arena isn't built.

The mayor applauded fans' ongoing efforts to keep the Kings in Sacramento. Some Kings fans are lobbying the Los Angeles Lakers and Clippers to vote "no" on allowing the Kings to move to Southern California, he said.

However, Johnson said he wants people to be realistic about their ability to impact the Maloofs' decision.

"I just want to make sure everyone's expectations are in alignment with the reality that we're facing," he said. "They are, in my estimation, doing everything they can to make a deal happen in Anaheim."

The City Council is expected to discuss how the schedule for the arena's financial analysis may be impacted by the recent news about the team's possible move and the Maloofs' unwillingness to provide financial data to the developers, he added.

Regional leaders may be called together next week for an update and to get their input on building a new arena.

If the team stays in Sacramento, the team's owners will have to spend money to recruit more good players, Johnson said.

"Over the last couple years, the basketball product that was put on the court hasn't been as competitive," he said. "And the basketball product on the court has not connected with the fan base in terms of rekindling or creating that energy and excitement. We haven't spent the dollars that we needed to win."  

 

Suzanne Hurt is a staff reporter for The Sacramento Press. Follow her on Twitter @SuzanneHurt.

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edited on  March 8, 2011 | 7:56 PM
If you thought cleaning up K Street has taken a long time (30 years and counting) imagine how long it will take another arena to be built here? The clock started 10 years ago and look how far we have come LOL!!!!!
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March 8, 2011 | 8:21 PM
Here's a plan... call in the 60 or 70 million the Maloofs owe us...sell Arco and the proceeds will be the public contribution toward building a new arena...
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March 8, 2011 | 9:08 PM
Rhys02- lol; you are on a row!!
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March 9, 2011 | 11:08 AM
as soon as you pay back your home mortgage in one payment, then i will support you call of the maloofs to pay their's.
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March 9, 2011 | 12:12 PM
70 million would go to pay off bond, plus Maloofs own Arco not Sac.
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March 8, 2011 | 10:58 PM
Thank you, Kevin Johnson, for reminding us of your lack of balls.
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March 9, 2011 | 10:16 AM
KJ is a year too late, at the very minimum. It is pathetic that it took the Kings leaving town before a push by the city like this. Everything that KJ has said since news of the Kings moving came out has had an anti-Maloof feel. Another NBA team will not move here in any of our lifetimes so save some cash and build a smaller venue like Stockton's Arena. No need for a place with 17,000+ seats for at least 30 years.
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March 9, 2011 | 8:34 PM
why is evryone anti tax.This would be the best thing that happened to this area since the kings arrived.I agree with everything kj is saying and he's being a realist understanding that with or without the kings we still need entertainment morons
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March 9, 2011 | 9:55 PM
Imagine if we put this kind of effort into something that would really improve our city, like say, our schools.
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March 11, 2011 | 7:26 AM
Well, shouldn't the school districts have been doing this all along?
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March 11, 2011 | 7:06 PM
If I am not misreading Mr. Beerzie, he is suggesting that it is a shame that out city's leadership (and curmudgeons) don't work themselves into a lather over the state of our public schools, but expend excessive energies on a sports team's edifice.
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March 14, 2011 | 7:22 AM
So in other words, you are letting the district officials off the hook.

As for the arena, I think Heather Fargo and the City Council of her time had their chance, and they blew it. If KJ can salvage it somehow, good for him. If not, I don't blame him.
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