spanky wrote:
I understand what you're saying, but that seems like a different type of thing. Proposing a $1 tax in a county in AZ (maybe it's state tax?) to build a facility that can benefit everyone in that immediate area is different than MLB imposing a $1 surcharge to build the Yankees a stadium acrss the country.
I think they should tax every person in that county or state. I think that's Jerry's thought too. The problem is that these fees are being charged on the largely out of state visitors who are going to games to watch a team other than the Cubs.
spanky wrote:
A more accurate comparison in my mind would be what BigFan was referencing originally - I (as a Cub fan) helped pay for US Cellular field (and it's upgrades/renovations) through the State of Illinois. I have chosen to take advantage of that by attending games in the past, but there are many Cub fans who haven't/will not. And if the Sox would have moved to Tampa instead of getting the Cell, I'm not sure there would have been an adverse effect on the Cubs or their tax paying fans. But the tax $ was used, and therefore the team stayed and the option is available.
I'd have no problem if this is how the Cubs renovated Wrigley or if this is how they were funding the spring training stadium. It's pretty standard practice that happens everywhere. A surcharge on a bunch of other teams in order to fund it seems incredibly rare. You are a Cub fan who is also a Chicagoan or Illinoisian who saw an economic return on the White Sox staying. If you were a Cub fan who was also a New Yorker you wouldn't be paying for a stadium you'd never use and never see an economic return on.
I may be wrong, but it's my understanding that the issue here is that Jerry and the other owners don't think it's fair that fans attending their games will be charged a dollar so another team can have a new stadium. They want the locals to pay for it since they get the most benefit.