Submitted by PercyDovetonsils t3_11a96z8 in rva
zstansberries t1_j9rpqof wrote
Reply to comment by Diet_Coke in MLB-required upgrades to The Diamond could cost city $3.5M by PercyDovetonsils
Correct. Schools do deserve $3.5M too. It should be both/and, not either/or.
LoveiseverywhereXOXO t1_j9v6nt1 wrote
Because that’s not how money works
Diet_Coke t1_j9rr28x wrote
Unfortunately the city's not an endless supply of money. The franchisee should pay for it, it's not like people who live here get free tickets to the games. If McDonalds was going to close the store on Broad and 18th St unless they spent $3.5M in renovations would you support the city giving them the money too?
zstansberries t1_j9rv3ih wrote
The city did not come to an agreement with a single McDonald's to maintain a specific standard of operating, but they did however come to that agreement with the SF Giants when they agreed for their affiliate team to play here. I'm arguing that the city should pay for the fees they agreed to pay for, while agreeing with your hypothetical unrelated point about public schools at the same time.
Moreover, the diamond and our baseball team are a significant driver of tourism and revenue for the city that warrants reinvestment. Why would they be actively planning to redevelop that entire area as "the diamond district" if it was not. The flying squirrels are arguably one of the most popular minor league teams, leading the league in overall attendance season after season. It would objectively be a horrible decision to lose them by not investing money that the city already knew it would have to invest.
Diet_Coke t1_j9rvw2b wrote
I don't think a ton of people are traveling to Richmond, staying in hotels, going to restaurants because of the Squirrels. It's mostly people from the surrounding counties (whose tax dollars wouldn't be going to the team) and they eat at the stadium and go home afterwards. That piece of land is being developed no matter what, it's right next to Scott's Addition and is a very obviously underutilized piece of real estate. They're calling it the diamond district for marketing, but it could be called anything and developers would be drooling over it.
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