One day after the Cleveland city council approved an additional $20 million in Cavaliers arena spending and Guardians stadium spending because the team’s leases say the public has to pay for it and the public repair fund had run dry, the Cuyahoga County council followed suit last night, approving $17.35 million in county money to buy the Cavs new elevators and a broadcast control room and buy the Guardians new HVAC units and repairs to a “subroof,” whatever that is:
Cuyahoga County will borrow $14.5 million to help Gateway Economic Development Corp. pay the repair bills at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse and Progressive Field.
On top of that, the county is giving $2.85 million in General Fund dollars to Gateway, the nonprofit that owns the ballpark and arena and oversees repairs.
Those with advanced degrees in how money works will recognize that “borrowing $14.5 million” is not actually a way of explaining how one plans to pay for something, but it fills Gateway’s budget hole for the moment. Future generations of county officials will get to figure out how to pay it off, though one got a head start by explaining that really, at least paying for constant upgrades is better than build a whole new stadium, amirite?
County Council Member Dale Miller, in a committee hearing on the proposal in November, argued that spending on repairs was preferable to building new stadiums.
“The key to our continuing to be a big-league sports town is that we maintain facilities in good condition, so that we don’t have to replace facilities every 25 years or so,” he said. “I know they’re doing that in some other cities, but we don’t have that kind of resources here.”
(Ed. note: Cuyahoga County is currently considering whether to replace a Browns stadium that is exactly 25 years old.)
Yesterday I wondered aloud why Cleveland and Cuyahoga County are paying for constant upgrades, and today I have a partial answer to that: Former Gateway chair Ken Silliman kindly provided copies of the Guardians and Cavs leases, and it turns out they each have slightly different definitions of what the public is on the hook for:
This, needless to say, raises a lot of questions, some of which Silliman was able to shed some light on:
How come Gateway pays for all routine maintenance, capital repairs, and major capital repairs for the Guardians, but only major capital repairs for the Cavs? Both teams, Silliman explains, were on the hook for maintenance and minor repairs as of 2021. That was when the city and county approved spending $17 million a year on stadium upgrades in exchange for Guardians owners Larry and Paul Dolan extending their team’s lease through 2036; as Silliman puts it, “the Guardians were successful in assigning ALL ballpark capital repairs to Gateway as a byproduct of the lease extension.” So a blank check got considerably blanker, in exchange for the Guardians owners agreeing to stay put for an extra 13 years.
Why does anything over $500,000 count as a major capital repair? Doesn’t this 1) incentivize the Cavs to bundle repair items into bigger projects, in hopes of making them the public’s responsibility, and 2) mean that as inflation kicks in over time, more and more repair items would be expected to fall under “major capital repairs”? The $500,000 threshold dates back to the teams’ 2004 leases, and Silliman says he doesn’t know how that distinction between major and minor repairs was decided on. He says the team cheating by piling up small repair projects hasn’t been an issue — Gateway’s engineering consultant has to approve expenses — but inflation absolutely is.
Silliman also forwarded a memo he wrote last fall to the Gateway board in which he said:
This “elephant in the room” is the unprecedented post-pandemic two year spike in construction cost inflation which unfortunately coincided with Gateway’s obligations to fund two of its costliest capital repairs (Cavaliers’ vertical transportation/video production room and Guardians’ lower and upper bowl seat replacements). This perfect storm of events is a major contributor to Gateway’s present cash needs.
That’s potentially good news in that the post-pandemic inflation spike is now over. However, construction costs continue to rise, and sin tax revenues continue to fall, and that $500,000 threshold for which Cavs expenses the public is on the hook for is going to be a lower and lower hurdle, so, it’s not all that good news.
Finally, the leases say the teams can sue Gateway for damages if they don’t get their repair money on time. However, if Gateway runs out of money — which it would if the city and county stopped giving it more cash — it doesn’t appear that the Guardians and Cavs owners can sue the city and county, so it’s within the governments’ power to shut off the money spigot and dare the teams to break their leases and try to find better ones elsewhere, if they wanted.
Tl;dr: Cleveland and Cuyahoga taxpayers aren’t on the hook for all upgrades to the Cavs arena and Guardians stadium, but they are responsible for paying for an unlimited amount of a limited number of items. (Think of it like different infinities.) The city officials who first set this up back in 2004 are mostly no longer around, though the ones in 2021 who took on “ALL ballpark capital repairs” for the Guardians should be getting questioned about that, early and often.