By Doug Porter
Oh, to have been a fly on the wall at city hall as the local football franchise went public with a ‘no thanks’ to the officially blessed plan of building a stadium in Mission Valley.
Once again the mayor and his minions have been left out in the cold.Last time they were spurned for an alliance with the Raiders to build a facility in Carson. This time it’s even worse, as the Chargers have thrown their support to a political coalition including the ne’er-do-well Cory Briggs.
In making this move the Chargers have rejected $350 million in city and county support –and the strings that came with it– saying they would get their own financing.
How’d they do that? Well, it’s complicated.
Something for Nothing?
The details are sketchy, but a big part of the plan involves support for a citizen initiative that includes a makeover of the municipal shakedown of tourists. So, yeah, there are tax dollars involved. Because the proposed reforms send those dollars to the general fund, only 51% support would be needed at the ballot box in November.
From the Union-Tribune:
The Briggs initiative – which is designed to require a simple majority vote – would raise hotel taxes for the city’s general fund and then enable the local hotel industry to apply for tax credits to fund tourism marketing and additional convention space away from the bay. If it reaches the November ballot and passes, the initiative will reduce state environmental hurdles to stadium construction in either Mission Valley or downtown, and encourage the city to designate the Qualcomm Stadium site for university and park uses.
Whether or not the Chargers will need a separate initiative to make a stadium happen is still being considered by team management. The UT article says the team needs to have a plan drafted by late March with final language ready for signature-gathering to begin in April in order to make the November ballot.
If you dig down through the layers of legalese and rhetoric, what is really going on is a power struggle over profit. We have rich white guys Team A (status quo) versus rich white guys Team B (new boss, probably not much different than the old boss). Government’s role in facilitating those profits is the real question being posed.
The Chargers have aligned their interests with the insurgents and in doing so will have to reach out to various interests not currently in the game.
A Three Dimensional Chess Game
Although the devil is in the details, this conflict could represent an opportunity for others not at the table to ask for concessions mitigating the inevitable consequences (convention center/stadium or not) in developing the eastern reaches of downtown. Other developers are proposing an expanded entertainment district, with neon signs and craft beverages as a draw.
Serious displacement is already occurring with the gentrification of Barrio Logan. What one activist calls ‘land pirates’ are seeking control of commercial corridors, interested more in the profit of flipping lots than the qualities making those properties attractive in the first place.
Other groups are seeking to transform the East Village into a hub for arts, education, and technology. The University of California–San Diego’s second largest employer– is considering expansion into a downtown learning/living/research hub near City College. Urban advocate Bill Adams and others envision a synergy drawing high paying jobs and artistic excellence into the area.
And then there’s the question of the homeless population, who inhabit the sidewalks, alleys and underpasses of the area, largely because they have no place else to go. The ballyhooed revitalization of downtown has replaced low-cost residential hotels, with nothing but empty promises from the developers who displaced them for former inhabitants.
Those are some of the questions that should be answered before we can even get down to whether or not a stadium/convention center hybrid is even desirable. Looking at this topic as a yes or no proposition fails to take into account that what’s really going on her is the San Diego equivalent of a three-dimensional chess game.
In the absence of mass movements for social change, allowances for the needs of the pawns have emerged from such conflicts in the past. Make no mistake about, regardless of what you hear or who you hear it from, there will be no concessions without public demand.
Meanwhile, here are some tidbits from the usual suspects in the local media…
A New Battle…
Scott Lewis at Voice of San Diego characterizes yesterday’s developments as a “New Battle Between the Mayor and the Chargers,” and there are lots of explainers and background to be found in this story. Do click on the embedded links.
Not a lot actually happened Tuesday except that an unprecedented coalition of big shots, a reviled (but often successful) public interest lawyer and a longtime community activist politicians have joined with the former owner of the Padres and his allies to challenge the mayor and existing downtown power structure in a fascinating way.
NBC7 San Diego quoted the response from Mayor Kevin Falconer and Supervisor Ron Roberts:

A drawing of JMI’s original plans
“Most experts we’ve talked to have concluded that building a stadium Downtown – on land not owned by either the City or the Chargers – would increase costs by hundreds of millions of dollars and take years longer to complete.
“However, it now appears that the Chargers intend to pursue a stadium in Downtown. It remains unclear how the Chargers intend to finance a Downtown stadium. But it is abundantly clear that a ballot measure that raises taxes for a stadium must be approved by two-thirds of San Diego’s voters. This is an extremely high hurdle to clear. We remain committed to maintaining an open dialogue with the Chargers as we learn more details about their plan.”
The Union-Tribune’s Dan McSwain devoted lots of bytes to the proposal, including this:
Although the team released few details, the new Chargers concept closely resembles its 2014 proposal with JMI to build a hybrid stadium/convention center in the East Village on parcels occupied by city-owned Tailgate Park, an MTS bus yard and private companies.
“The multi-use facility, when combined with Petco Park, the existing convention center, the Gaslamp Quarter, and a revitalized East Village, would create an unparalleled entertainment and sports district that will host Super Bowls and will ideally be a permanent home for Comic-Con and a Comic-Con museum,” the team said Tuesday.
“All of our research demonstrates that voters are more likely to approve a multi-use facility that would generate economic activity on hundreds of days per year, including by attracting major sporting and convention events that San Diego cannot now host.”
Twitter and Facebook went nuts following the team’s announcement. The twitter feeds for Cory Briggs and Eric Brovold (with Tony Manolatos–former stadium task force spokesman–casting lots of shade) all contain lots of nuggets suggestive of the debate likely to occur in coming months.
Is this proposal a good thing or bad thing? I don’t know yet. Trust me, I’ll have plenty more to say in coming months…
A Supreme Strategy for Obama
Now that Senate Republicans have made it clear that they have no intention of even considering a candidate for the Supreme Court nominated by The Black Guy in The White House, Esquire columnist Charles P. Pierce has a suggestion:
The president’s next move is obvious.
He finds the most ridiculously qualified candidate he can find among whatever demographic or social group is most disadvantageous to the Republicans, and he puts that candidate up as quickly as possible. He does event after event, with the candidate by his side. He campaigns for Senate candidates in New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Illinois, all places with vulnerable Republican incumbents, and he brings the nominee along with him.
To elect a Democratic president in the fall is to elect this wonderfully qualified person, a credit to the American dream and to our greatness as a people, to the Supreme Court as well. Could it be that the Republican Party’s capacity to walk in lockstep off a cliff–known to medical science as The Schiavo Syndrome–has now surpassed the Democratic Party’s capacity to step on its own dick when presented with a political opportunity? If the president has brought about that turn of events, his whole two terms have been worth electing him in the first place.
Trump’s Path to Victory
The Donald has emerged victorious in the Nevada caucuses, and San Diego’s own Rep. Duncan Hunter knows a winner when he sees one.
From Talking Points Memo:
Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-CA) told Politico that America “doesn’t need a policy wonk” in his endorsement of Trump…
…”I think you have more Trump supporters in Congress. They just have to come out of the closet, so to speak,” he added.
Politico noted Hunter sponsored the so-called “Donald Trump Act,” which would have required police sanctuary cities to notify immigration officials if they apprehended an undocumented immigrant. Hunter also recently made headlines for using a vaporizer while arguing against a ban on e-cigarettes on passenger planes in a congressional hearing.
Here’s Juan Cole on the impotence of the GOP establishment and the acquiescence of the media in the rise of Trump:
It has been a dreadful performance by the press and by party leaders. They are speaking in such a way as to naturalize the creepy, weird and completely un-American positions Trump has taken.
This is how the dictators came to power in the 1920s and 1930s. Good people remained silent or acquiesced. People expressed hope that something good would come of it. Mussolini would wring the laziness out of Italy and make the trains run on time.
When Benjamin Franklin was asked by a lady after the Constitutional Convention what sort of government the US had, he said, “A Republic, Madame, if you can keep it.”
You have to wonder if we can keep it.
On This Day: 1903 – In Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, an area was leased to the U.S. for a naval base. 1919 – Congress passed a federal child labor tax law that imposed a 10 percent tax on companies that employ children, defined as anyone under the age of 16 working in a mine/quarry or under the age 14 in a “mill, cannery, workshop, factory, or manufacturing establishment.” The Supreme Court ruled the law unconstitutional three years later. 1956 – The city of Cleveland invoked a 1931 law that barred people under the age of 18 from dancing in public without an adult guardian.
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Anita Hill as Supreme Court nominee.
I again predict that:
A) the initiative is too complex; people will not vote for something they cannot understand, and
B) even if it were approved, court challenges sure to follow assure that it will not be implemented.
BTW, that boast from Il Duce should be “RUN on time” not FUN on time ;-)
I agree with you completely, Michael-Leonard. The situation is getting much too complex for the average citizen to understand it. If it requires any voting whatsoever, it will not pass.
On the other hand it cannot be accomplished by just the purchase of private property downtown even if the Chargers wanted to go that route. Is this just another subterfuge on the part of the Chargers whose real motive and goal is just to move to LA?
To those saying “it’s too complicated,” remember this was the same argument used against Obamacare… which while not as good as single-payer does represent an incremental improvement.
I’m not saying to support or not the “Citizen’s Plan.” I’m saying this is what’s in front of us. And nobody with any mojo has an alternative.
ACA was voted on by the 535 in Congress. The “Citizens Plan” is going before the general public.
And, I’m not saying to NOT support it, I’m only saying it won’t make a bit o’ difference.
I’m saying don’t support the new stadium in either place. It benefits only tourists. The Hotels are planned, the roads will jam up and the city will lose its ass again. We’re being asked by billionaires for tax money that could go toward affordable housing, new sewers, repairs for Balboa Park, better schools, fewer axle-breaking potholes and other features of a functional city. When Faulconer loses this battle he’ll get a job at KFMB-TV or KUSI. Then we’ll know we can’t believe him.
I agree with Esquire columnist Charles P. Pierce completely. If Obama and the Democrats don’t follow a strategy something like this, they are wasting a great opportunity.
The stadium game is a meltdown quite similar to the Republican Party’s. Lots of overprivileged white business guys fighting amongst themselves for dominance, in the meantime losing credibility every day the struggle between them wears on, and on. There’s nothing new in the Chargers plan, nor the city’s; this is a signal that they’re willing to spend money to wear down a tired public, much as Caruso is doing in Carlsbad. They’ll soon be looking for some new way to avoid a public vote on a tax-supported subsidy of corporate business. They’ll be calling $75 per seat a relative bargain in the NFL. They’ll congratulate themselves for having figured out a way to move the homeless to some baking plateau in East San Diego at the same time they turn Logan into a big parking garage. This isn’t just about stealing public money; it’s about destroying centers of resistance to the absolute control of the public dollar for private profit.
The stadium question used to be, should a new stadium be built with taxpayer assistance. Not it’s whether the new stadium should be built in Mission Valley or downtown. The paradigm shift was accomplished with the assistance and collusion of our local yocal trash media.
The thousands of potholes on city streets alone will get in the way of any public financing. Some creative person should get a slogan going to this effect and at least make bumper stickers. I doubt anyone with the city even knows how many potholes there are!
As for the homeless they need all the help and aid we can give them, not another new sidewalk ‘address.’