Minneapolis City Council president Barbara Johnson told Sports Headliners she doesn’t expect a special legislative session to be called in November to address the Vikings stadium issue. “I would be surprised if the governor (Mark Dayton) and the legislature can get agreement to go ahead on one (stadium) proposal,” she said.
The Ramsey County-backed Arden Hills stadium proposal is “in trouble,” according to Johnson who is working with mayor R.T. Rybak to promote stadium sites in Minneapolis. “People want a referendum on Arden Hills and that will kill it (the proposal),” she said.
Johnson believes there are also “too many unknowns” about the Arden Hills site to gain state approval in November, and she said a stadium there leaves Vikings fans “captive to ownership.” Those who have the latter opinion will argue the Arden Hills site doesn’t have access to public transportation, fans will pay the Vikings to park, and food-drink and entertainment options presumably will be less varied than downtown if a new stadium is built in any of three potential locations supported by Johnson and Rybak. Minneapolis advocates claim their proposed sites are all less costly than Arden Hills.
The Vikings are adamant in supporting the Ramsey County plan that the two parties reached accord on earlier this year. Johnson knows Minneapolis isn’t being courted by the Vikings while franchise leaders try to push through a special session and a vote in favor of an Arden Hills site. “We just have to continue to be like Rocky (Balboa),” she said. “We’re not discouraged.”
The Minneapolis funding proposal to become the local partner for the stadium would increase the sales tax now dedicated to paying off bonds for the city’s Convention Center. The sales tax would increase from .50 percent to .85 percent and generate benefits beyond a stadium including property tax relief for city residents, according to Johnson.
The effort to keep the Vikings downtown would be made easier if Hennepin County became a partner. “I’ve been talking to county commissioners and the mayor has, too,” Johnson said. “They’re more willing (for now) to sit on the sidelines.”
Although Johnson believes there’s a need to expedite the stadium solution process, she doesn’t believe it has to be in November. “The governor heard from the NFL ‘you better do something,’ ” she said. “He’s trying to be responsive.”