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Arenamania: Newark nets deal.


The New Jersey Devils The New Jersey Devils are a professional ice hockey team based in Newark, New Jersey. They are members of the Atlantic Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Devils have won the Stanley Cup three times, in 1995, 2000, and 2003.  and Nets will have a new $355 million home in 2004 under a tentative agreement announced last week by Acting Gov. Donald DiFrancesco Donald Thomas DiFrancesco (born November 20, 1944, Scotch Plains, New Jersey) was the 51st Governor of New Jersey from 2001 to 2002 by virtue of his status as President of the New Jersey Senate, the upper house of the New Jersey Legislature. .

"What is most unique about the proposal is that the general taxpayers of New Jersey will have no obligation. There will be no budget appropriation, not contract bonds. The economic activity generated by the arena and the resulting economic improvements will self-finance the construction of the arena," DiFrancesco said.

Under the agreement, state taxpayers would not provide any of the upfront costs to construct the stadium. Rather, it would be financed in part by diverting up to $190 million in sales taxes sales tax, levy on the sale of goods or services, generally calculated as a percentage of the selling price, and sometimes called a purchase tax. It is usually collected in the form of an extra charge by the retailer, who remits the tax to the government.  over the next 30 years to service construction debt. YankeeNets, the holding company that owns the Devils, would provide $115 million and $50 million will be financed by revenues generated to Essex County Essex County can refer to:
  • Essex County, Ontario, Canada
  • Essex County, Massachusetts, United States of America
  • Essex County, New Jersey, United States of America
  • Essex County, New York, United States of America
 and the City of Newark. YankeeNets will oversee the construction and be solely responsible for any cost overruns.

The agreement also calls for $30 million in public roadway improvements in Newark undertaken through the Transportation Trust Fund.

"We had a sports arena in the Meadowlands that was losing money and' that required a taxpayer subsidy of more than $10 million a year," DiFrancesco said. "We also had team owners who were expressing a desire to compete in Newark or, if that wasn't possible, to leave the state."

Lewis Eisenberg, chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, self-sustaining public corporation established in 1921 by the states of New York and New Jersey to administer the activities of the New York–New Jersey port area, which has a waterfront of c. , finalized the deal last week during a meeting in midtown mid·town  
n.
A central portion of a city, between uptown and downtown.


midtown
Noun

US & Canad the centre of a town
 Manhattan with philanthropist and businessman Raymond Chambers, Nets principal owner Lewis Katz and Finn Wentworth, YankeeNets chief financial officer. DiFrancesco participated by telephone.

Under the plan, the state will create a new entity called the "Sports Entertainment Sports entertainment is a type of of entertainment that takes the form of a sporting event, but with more emphasis on dramatic storylines, humor, spectacle or titillation than on a contest of athletic skills.  District," which will allow a portion of the sales tax revenues to service construction debt. The new district will replace the current Urban Enterprise Zone urban enterprise zone: see enterprise zone.  and result in the Newark sales tax to return to the state rate of 6 percent.

The arena will be owned by a New Jersey government entity and the Devils and Nets will enter into a 30-year, triple net lease with responsibility for all operations and operating costs operating costs nplgastos mpl operacionales . The YankeesNets, which will manage the arena when it opens in 2004, will make payments of $500,000 per year for the first five years and $1 million per year thereafter to fund future capital improvements. YankeesNets will retain all revenues generated at the arena, under the agreement.

Newark officials said the arena would help revitalize the city's downtown area. It would be built on a 40-acre site at Market and Mulberry Streets and would be surrounded by $100 million in privately built restaurants office buildings, parking garages and a hotel and television studio.

"Talk of the arena has generated strong interest from the private sector, including the possibility of a major hotel and a massive retail center," DiFrancesco said.

After the new arena is completed, the Sports and Exposition Authority will shut down the Continental Airlines Arena in East Rutherford. The state is in discussions with entertainment companies about the future use of the Meadowlands site, including the possibility of building a new stadium for the New York Giants
    This article is about the current National Football League team. For other uses, see New York Giants (disambiguation).

The New York Giants are a professional American football team based in the New York City metropolitan area.
 and Jets.

The agreement between DiFrancesco and YankeeNets comes three years after Newark officials' first pitched the idea to Gov. Christie Whitman. She offered YankeeNets $125 million in cash, loans and tax breaks and authorized Newark and Essex County to provide up to $90 million. DiFrancesco killed Whitman's proposal his first day in office and vowed to negotiate his own.
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Author:KEITH, NATALIE
Publication:Real Estate Weekly
Date:Jun 13, 2001
Words:592
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