Building buzz.Last fall, residents of Charlotte, North Carolina “Charlotte” redirects here. For other uses, see Charlotte (disambiguation). Charlotte is the largest city in the state of North Carolina and the 20th largest city in the United States. , were in despair. The owner of the city's NBA NBA abbr. 1. National Basketball Association 2. National Boxing Association NBA (US) n abbr (= National Basketball Association) → Basketball-Dachverband (= Hornets, George Shinn, was threatening to move the franchise unless taxpayers ponied up one-third of the estimated $160 million it would cost to finance a new arena. Though the team has sold out every game in the history of the eight-year-old franchise, the Charlotte Coliseum's paucity of luxury boxes - extra-plush seating areas that rent for hundreds of thousands of dollars per season - left Shinn without the corporate revenues other teams depend upon to pay top salaries for the best players. Now there's nothing but smiles in the Queen City. This year, the scrappy Hornets won a franchise-record 54 regular season games. And Shinn has offered to buy the coliseum, giving the team a more permanent, private home. Built by taxpayers in the late 1980s, the 24,000-seat coliseum was one of the last major indoor sports facilities See:
Shinn first complained about the lack of luxury boxes in 1992. At that time Don Reid
Don Reid (born December 30 1973, in Washington, D.C. , a City Council member and former head of the taxpayer group Citizens for Effective Government, proposed selling the coliseum to Shinn for about $60 million, more than the debt the city owed on the arena. Reid was treated rather rudely by the local establishment, including then-Mayor Richard Vinroot Richard Vinroot (born 14 April 1941) is an American attorney and politician from Charlotte, North Carolina. Vinroot served as mayor of Charlotte from 1991 to 1995. In 1996, he unsuccessfully sought the Republican nomination for governor of North Carolina, losing in the primary to , who opposed the sale in part out of fears that the city wouldn't be able to control events in a private facility. Vinroot suggested, to the horror of fellow Charlotteans, that a private coliseum might even host a Grateful Dead concert! By 1996, however, Reid had built a coalition of neighborhood activists, opponents of higher taxes, and even the local League of Women Voters League of Women Voters, voluntary public service organization of U.S. citizens. Organized in 1920 in Chicago as an outgrowth of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, it had as its original nucleus the leaders of the latter organization. . These groups argued that the money borrowed to finance a new facility would crowd out spending for other public services Public services is a term usually used to mean services provided by government to its citizens, either directly (through the public sector) or by financing private provision of services. or preclude tax relief. Selling the coliseum would also save local residents $4.5 million a year in debt service. And in the interim, the Carolina Panthers, Charlotte's NFL NFL abbr. National Football League NFL (US) n abbr (= National Football League) → Fußball-Nationalliga team, had moved into the new, private Ericsson Stadium, which got less than 20 percent of its funding from taxpayers. By late March, Shinn had abandoned his demands for a new tax-funded arena, offering to buy the coliseum for the $30 million the city still owes. As owner of the arena, Shinn could build luxury boxes and capture all the revenue. At press time the city had not yet accepted Shinn's proposal for a different reason than before: It's entertaining offers from other investors who may pay more for the coliseum and then lease it to the Hornets. |
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