Wednesday, January 07, 2015

Ozdemir Back At The Legislature Seeking Public Money To Build Soccer Arena

Turkish businessman Ersal Ozdemir knows better than any other immigrant to this country that Indiana politicians are easily bought with campaign contributions so he'll make a return trip to the State House with his high-paid lobbying team this year asking taxpayers to finance a nearly $90 million soccer stadium for his Indy Eleven team. Last year, the minor league soccer team had yet to play a game at the more than suitable Carroll Stadium on IUPUI's campus. State Rep. Todd Huston (R-Fishers) will sponsor the legislation instead of an Indianapolis lawmaker where the arena is proposed to be built.

The team's president, Peter Wilt of Chicago Fire infamy, tells the Indianapolis Star the team can justify public financing of a new arena because it sold out every game last year, a fable only made true if you count the thousands of tickets given away for free during the season. Even with all of the free tickets given away, there were still gaping holes in the stands at many of its home games. What the team doesn't generate in fan interest Wilt assures us will be made up by the use of the arena for outdoor concerts. But what about Dave Lucas' planned amphitheater at the former GM Stamping Plant along White River? How many downtown concert venues can the Indianapolis support? More from the Star's Mark Alesia.
. . . A year ago, critics took aim at ticket-tax revenue projections of $5 million per year by team owner Ersal Ozdemir, a well-connected developer and generous contributor to politicians. The projections, critics said, were extremely high. 
But Wilt noted that the facility would be used for concerts as well as soccer. He said he's "cautiously optimistic" that the team will get a stadium. 
"A year ago, (skeptics) were saying, 'Let's see how they do after they play a game,' " Wilt said. "Then they said, 'How will it go after the first game?' Then 'How will it go after the spring season?' " 
"I think the proof is there. Soccer's foundation is broad. It's not a fad. The roots of the sport are deep now. It's certainly ingrained in the traditional youth soccer community. But beyond that, it's now ingrained with young adults, new Americans and sports fans in general. It's no longer a niche sport. It's in the mainstream." 
Wilt said the endgame is not necessarily a place in Major League Soccer, the nation's top pro soccer league. He said the Eleven could be among the NASL teams that elevate themselves to the level of the MLS . . . 
You won't get this kind of analysis in the sports-happy Indianapolis media, but please check out my damning post last year about Wilt's failed tenure at the Chicago Fire and the costly new arena taxpayers built in the Bridgeport community that never came close to living up to Wilt's public pitch. That arena deal left taxpayers with a big debt and higher taxes when the arena never came close to generating the revenues Wilt claimed it would generate. The supposed economic development spin-off effect surrounding the arena never materialized. Attendance never lived up to expectations either, which is very telling since Chicago has a much larger immigrant population which favors soccer over other sporting events.

According to reports it filed with the Indiana Lobby Registration Commission, Ozdemir only spent a little more than $22,000 on lobbying the legislature last year for passage of his proposed publicly-financed arena. You can rest assured that's but a fraction of what he actually paid his lobbying team. Under Indiana's worthless lobbying laws, most of the money firms spend on on lobbying isn't counted towards the amount they are required by law to report.

Incidentally, we're now approaching the two-year anniversary date of the legislature's approval of the $100 million taxpayer giveaway to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Despite the urgency and scant public debate undertaken before the legislature rammed approval of that public subsidy through the legislature, there still have been no bonds issued or money claimed by the IMS for track-related improvements. Does anyone else find that odd?

6 comments:

  1. Anonymous8:34 AM GMT-5

    Ersal's predictable return to the public trough will no doubt again result in Republican and Democrat politicians helping to build the Turk's personal fortune. No matter how many truthful news reports such as this come before the people our politicians continue the giveaways.


    ReplyDelete
  2. John Accetturo9:35 AM GMT-5

    How much money money Ersal given politicians in campaign contributions? Cheap way to get millions in taxpayer money . Just ask Mayor Brainard.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Having been offered these tickets (free) on several occasions; my sense is they're routinely given away to fill seats. How does a single season serve as a track record & why is the public treasury being mortgaged to serve private interests?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Is this Huston guy sponsoring the bill related to Tom Huston of the infamous Huston Plan to subvert the U.S. Constitution during Richard Nixon's presidency?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Anonymous3:56 PM GMT-5

    I recall TJ insisting several years back that we had to swiftly move out of the E. Vermont MCRCC HQ to Ersal's building on S. Pennsylvania because the E. Vermont space allegedly was rented out requiring a swift, urgent move.

    Subsequent to the "grass roots" helping move the old HQ to Ersal Ozdemir's Majestic Building, I noted that the former E. Vermont HQ stood vacant for quite some time... some time longer than would makes sense for the moving reasons given by TJ in the first place.

    I always wondered what the arrangement between TJ and Ersal was to have the Marion County Republican Party- which seems to be Ersal's personal ATM- just floors below the millionaire Turkish immigrant's offices. I always wondered why TJ would take a much more accessible E. Vermont Street location for Ward Chairs to pick up political signage, brochures, push cards, ten day runs, etc., than to select a remote third floor in the clouds office space above the people with expensive street parking all the way around.

    How much does the MCRCC pay Ersal for rental on that 3rd floor?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Anonymous7:30 AM GMT-5

    Anon 3:56-The MCRCC didn't pay Ersal anything until a nosy person started asking questions.

    ReplyDelete