yorost wrote:DudeAnon wrote:I am usually on the "right" side of politics so why is Chicago funding a private university? Seems pretty wrong to me.
They aren't funding DePaul, if anything DePaul is funding the city. The project is not just the arena, a large venue is just something the project wanted. DePaul kicks in $70 million and gets a few things in return... naming rights, primary tenant, the venue is built to be suitable for them. The city will own the arena and charge DePaul rent to use it.
I know I said this just above, but the only way you can criticize DePaul's involvement from a taxpayer perspective is if you know how DePaul changed the project. Given that they're kicking in so much money and based on the city's desire for a casino (thus likely wanting a large venue already), I have a hard time thinking this cost taxpayers money. The project costs tax money, definitely (I believe most or all of it is already collected, though), but DePaul's involvement may not have.DudeAnon wrote:Personally, I just don't believe private money should mix with public but obviously it does all the time.
That's too harsh a stance, government should be working with private entitles if it's the smart and/or cost effective way to accomplish something. In a sense, if the government doesn't work with private entities, who are they working with? If the government thought bringing DePaul on board was smart for the taxpayer, then it was a proper decision.
NJRedman wrote:From what I understood DePaul would pay 70 mil, Chicago would pay 70 mil and they would sell the naming rights for the other 70 mil. Also I doubt if DePaul is paying 70 mil that they would have to pay to play there. I'm sure that 70 mil covers their rent for the first decade or so. Thats what United Center was offering and i'm sure DePaul wouldn't agree to help pay for the building of the Arena just so they could pay more to play a game there.
Demon22 wrote:FWIW, there's a far more reliable report that pegs the cost of this at $195 million, with the financing breakdown as follows:
$70 million from DePaul, who would be allowed to sell the naming rights.
$70 million from McPier, though the sale of bonds.
$55 million from the City of Chicago through Tax Increment Financing.
Also, it's being reported that the development will include hotels, restaurants, and some retail.
DudeAnon wrote:Personally, I just don't believe private money should mix with public but obviously it does all the time.
yorost wrote:Corruption is right around the corner when you have money or power of any sort.
It's harsh because the government cannot avoid working with private entities. Unless you go to an extreme small government model or extreme socialist government, public and private will be working together financially. It doesn't make sense to say money from private and public shouldn't mix. How do you avoid it? With something like this in DePaul, the notion of what is happening is almost ideal, the private entity which will benefit from a public project is paying a hefty share of the cost. Corruption would be DePaul paying nothing and the exact same project going in. I would argue that if DePaul is offering them a clearly better deal (which is always hard to analyze, and I'm not saying they are since the data is not available for any of us to judge) for the public, then it would be corrupt to turn them away.
Two final points stand out:
1. The Chicago plan might or might not eventually lead to a much-discussed city-owned casino being built adjacent to McCormick Place. If that happens, all budget projections for the current plan are bunk, because casino arena events (see: MMA and boxing) mean big money. But even if that doesn't happen, with a new arena near the world's largest convention center, there's no reason the city shouldn't be able to maximize the 300-some days in the calendar in which DePaul won't be playing a men's or women's home basketball game. DePaul gets to pay rent and avoid raising tuition in the trade, but this is the city's building.
2. Success is a self-fulfilling prophecy. Has DePaul won seven Big East games in five seasons because the program is destined to be bad? Or is it because DePaul played its home games in a decrepit suburban arena that, as one person close to the program told me recently, it sometimes doesn't even show to recruits? If DePaul's new home can boost recruiting to the point that even a small fraction of local talent begins to consider the Blue Demons, the Blue Demons will improve. If they improve, more people will come to games.
Using Allstate Arena ticket data to dismiss the new project is reductive.
...whatever does follow from here, DePaul, a private university, has cast its lot in with the most byzantine municipal government in recorded human history. In other words: stay tuned.
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