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Tuesday, June 20 | |||||
Residents don't want Fenway's tax burden | |||||
BOSTON -- City councilors and residents urged Red Sox
officials to find a cheaper site elsewhere in Boston to build the
new ballpark, calling the team's proposal an unfair financial
burden on taxpayers.
The Red Sox are asking for $275 million in public financing for
their $627 million ballpark plan -- $140 million from the city to
purchase and clear land for the new ballpark and $135 million from
the state to build parking garages, and improve roads and subway
stations.
Residents said at a City Hall hearing Monday that it is unfair
for the city to consider spending so much on a baseball park when
other plans to build new schools, community centers and other city
improvements have been scrapped for financial reasons.
"We have a housing crisis, we have a healthcare crisis, we have
a transit crisis, we have an open space crisis," said Helen Cox, a
resident of the Fenway neighborhood since 1958. "We do not have a
baseball crisis."
Team officials have pitched the plan for the expanded, updated
park near the current Fenway as a boon for the city.
But councilors said they worry about the effect the plan will
have on Boston's taxpayers.
"If (the plan) impacts negatively the majority of the
stakeholders, I, for one, will not support it," said City
Councilor Michael Ross, who represents the Fenway section of
Boston.
The park proposal needs the approval of the city council and
Mayor Thomas Menino after it is voted on and approved by
legislators.
Team officials had hoped to get the plan to lawmakers before the
legislative session ends July 31, but City Councilor Daniel
Conley said they should wait.
He urged developers not to be penned in by the legislative
deadline and instead take time to look elsewhere for a more
affordable site.
But according to Boston Redevelopment Authority planner Kairos
Shen, the new park needs a 12-acre site accessible to public
transportation. Any site that fits that description within Boston
would cost almost as much as the Fenway location, he said.
To help pay for the cost of the stadium, Red Sox chief executive
John Harrington has proposed instituting game day parking
surcharges, surcharges on luxury suite patrons, a slight hike in
the city's hotel tax, a higher tax district around the ballpark,
and new property taxes on the current ballpark site.
Harrington said those proposals could net the city about $18
million to $20.5 million per year.
But Menino, who was not at Monday's hearing, has taken a hard
line on the issue. He has committed to spending no more than $140
million to buy the Fenway site, and wants the funds returned to
taxpayers.
Former longtime city councilor Albert "Dapper" O'Neill said
the city should not feel required to spend even that much on the
park.
"There's nothing that says we have to finance a private
company," he said.
Red Sox officials are reportedly interested in luring Chicago
Cubs slugger Sammy Sosa to Boston, and that alone would cost
millions, he said.
"They've got plenty of dough," he said. "Don't let them kid
you." |