NYT: City Council Backs Yankees' Plan for New Stadium
By WINNIE HU
Published: April 5, 2006
The New York Yankees' effort to build a new stadium cleared its biggest hurdle today with a City Council vote in support of the team's ambitious plan to knock down the storied Bronx institution known around the world as the House that Ruth Built.
The new stadium will be built on parkland directly across the street from the current Yankee Stadium, which has served as the home base of the team that won an unparalleled 26 World Series since it was built in 1923. The new 53,000-seat stadium will offer 60 luxury skyboxes and 10,000 parking spaces when it is completed in 2009.
By a vote of 44 to 3, the council overwhelmingly authorized construction of the $800 million stadium, despite opposition from several council members as well as parks advocates and residents in the surrounding community, which is among the poorest in the nation. These critics say the stadium would take away valuable parkland in a neighborhood that already has too little, snarl traffic on game days and lead to more pollution.
Under the financing plan for the stadium, the Yankees will pay for the construction through $930 million in bonds issued by the city, of which about $860 million will be tax exempt. The team will pay back the city through payments in lieu of taxes, in addition to providing millions of dollars in benefits to the local community.
While the Yankees will not pay rent for the new stadium, the team will be responsible for the maintenance and operation costs and any capital improvements. In the current stadium, the Yankees pay rent but only after deducting the cost of maintenance from that amount. The team pays no capital expenses....
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