St. Lawrence plans to enter "floating
crap ga me"
with taxpayers' money
Baseball plan is analyzed by sports
business expert
March 7, 2010 Evan Weiner, a New
York City-based journalist and speaker, is recognized as a global
expert on the business of sports. He was presented with the United
States Sports Academy's first ever Distinguished Service Award for
Journalism in 2003 in Mobile, Alabama. This morning on the
www.examiner.com website he
posted an analysis of the St. Lawrence initiative to borrow $25 to
$30 million to build a stadium to bring a minor league baseball team
to Ramapo. Here's the article.
In Ramapo, NY, $25 million gets you a team in an
economically challenged baseball league
March 7, 2010 Congratulations to Town Supervisor
Christopher St. Lawrence in the New York City suburb of Ramapo, New
York. Supervisor St. Lawrence has landed an independent league
baseball team in the Can-Am League. All Supervisor St. Lawrence
needs to do is commit $25 million to build a 3,500-seat baseball
park in Ramapo Woods and hope to find an owner for the venture.
If that happens, Ramapo will join a league that is more of a
floating crap game than a stable organized entity. The league will
start the 2010 season with six teams, Brockton, MA. Little Falls,
NJ, Pittsfield, MA, Quebec City, QC, Augusta, NJ and Worcester, MA.
The Worcester team played in Nashua, NH in 2009.
The CanAm League had eight teams in 2008, but Ottawa and Atlantic
City folded after the season. This is a league with a long history
of instability in the five years it has existed as teams in Elmira,
NY, New Haven, CT., and Lynn, MA have also failed. The CanAm League
has twice featured traveling teams called the Aces and the Grays.
The Grays traveling squad was supposed to have played in Bangor, ME
but the owners pulled out and the league took over to keep an even
amount of teams. Unlike minor league baseball affiliated teams, the
owners of independent baseball leagues have to pay the salaries of
the rostered players, managers, coaches and athletic trainers which
means money is extremely tight and sometimes runs out.
It is also a league with a salary cap and players live with host
families. The CanAm League has had some players go onto Major League
Baseball organizations with eight CanAm League players having their
contracts sold to Major League organizations in 2009 and there are a
number of CanAm League players in Major League Baseball spring
training camps.
It is in this environment that Christopher St. Lawrence is
wagering about $25 million so that his town can be a player in
independent baseball.
St. Lawrence is jubilant about bringing the first independent league
baseball team to his town. He believes that the Ramapo Woods Stadium
will break even and that the town will be able to pay off the debt
on the money that is needed to build the facility.
The rose color glasses were still on when St. Lawrence talked
about the economic impact of the team and the stadium in Ramapo. The
reality is St. Lawrence is willing to buy a bill of goods, but he
doesn’t think so and that is the problem. The Ramapo stadium is
rather small potatoes to use a Donald Trumpism when compared to the
new football stadium in Indianapolis which is costing the city a lot
of money that Indianapolis doesn’t have. Indianapolis budgeted a
certain amount of funds for the upkeep of the new facility and
figured wrong.
St. Lawrence ought to be more familiar with federal law when it
comes to stadium and revenues when it comes back to paying down the
debt. Only eight cents out of every dollar generated inside a
facility built with public funding goes back to the public unless a
very specific lease arrangement is worked out. Given the history of
the CanAm League with just Brockton and Little Falls still in the
league as this incarnation of the CanAm League begins season number
six, it is very likely that the lease St. Lawrence signs with any
owner will be a sweetheart deal.
If St. Lawrence is lucky, the team owner will use the franchise
as a tax write off or as a toy and won’t care about losing dollars
and will keep the team funded.
There are some other issues surrounding the stadium building that
need to be called into question. There will be construction jobs,
those are not permanent and those workers are not going to be paid
any more money on this project that say building a factory. St.
Lawrence also claims there will be 25 permanent jobs and about 75
part time jobs created because of the stadium and franchise.
St. Lawrence’s $25 million investment will create some jobs all
right. Those 25 permanent positions if connected to the baseball
team will be minimum wage positions, which probably will not have
benefits and will be entry-level positions at best. The part time
jobs will be parking lot vendors, concession workers and will be per
diem positions. The New York Times did a story in 2009 about a
Columbia University sports management student who swept floors in
the Sussex team clubhouse. That will be more typical of the type of
employment available with the Ramapo team and at the stadium. St.
Lawrence would be better off funding a supermarket, which typically
has four or five different shifts with full time workers, workers
who live in the community and circulate their money in a community.
That is a far better economic plan than building a stadium although
there is an intrinsic value to having a team in the community of
community pride, feeling good when the local guys win.
Those stadium-related jobs would not be economic engines.
St. Lawrence’s stadium will need more business than just an
independent league baseball team which has the doors open for
business just some 50 times in a 365 day calendar year. There are
315 other days where there is no business, so there is a suggestion
that minor college programs, Rockland Community College, St. Thomas
Aquinas and Dominican can use the facility along with some local
amateur baseball programs. That is all fine and good but when you
spend $25 million in a tough economic environment, you better have
other planned usage of the facility year round.
St. Lawrence apparently thinks local cable TV and local radio
will carry Ramapo games, which will bring money and interest to
the team. There are community access stations and there could be an
Internet presence but there will be no regional cable TV network and
there are three in the area, Madison Square Garden, the Yankee-Nets
YES Network and the Mets-Time Warner-Comcast SNY but St. Lawrence
should not hold his breath waiting for a cable deal from any of
those three entities and the two radio stations in the area present
unique challenges. One station has a Polish talk and cultural
format; the other has a terrible signal and has just 83 watts of
power at night.
The Ramapo stadium will have all of the requisites required in
sports today, 25 luxury suites and fan "amenities" in a setting in
the woods with the mountains in the background. It is not really
about baseball no matter what St. Lawrence and his allies are
selling. It is about ambience, about well to do customers buying
luxury boxes or selling naming rights to a stadium even for
independent league games. It is about being a player in pro sports.
Twenty-five million dollars is not a high price these days for a
stadium but a small municipality like Ramapo can ill afford the
price tag when the entire economic picture is fully painted. New
York State is going to cut back funding to all municipalities in the
state and somewhere, somehow, taxes will be going up in Ramapo or
services will be cut back. But Ramapo has the $25 million and St.
Lawrence wants independent baseball and that is what Ramapo might
get in 2011."
Evan Weiner
Examiner.com
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