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Sports Title: Bills Blocking Taxpayer Funding Of Sports Arenas Could Gain Steam Amid Anthem Protests A companion measure to the legislation was already proposed in the House back in March by Oklahoma Republican Rep. Steve Russell. Last June, New Jersey Democratic Sen. Cory Booker and Republican Oklahoma Sen. James Lankford put forth a bill that would ban professional sports teams from using municipal bonds in relation to federal funding to build their sports arenas. Professional sports teams generate billions of dollars in revenue, Booker said in a statement. Theres no reason why we should give these multimillion-dollar businesses a federal tax break to build new stadiums. Its not fair to finance these expensive projects on the backs of taxpayers, especially when wealthy teams end up reaping most of the benefits. The Oklahoma Republican senator agreed, saying, The federal government is responsible for a lot of important functions, but financing sports stadiums for multi-million sometimes billion dollar franchises is definitely not one of them. A spokesman from Lankfords office told The Daily Caller Sunday that in the last four weeks interest in the bill has picked up since both members proposed it four months ago. Should taxpayers have to pick up the tab for stadiums for wealthy professional athletes and team owners who thumb their noses when the national anthem is played in those very stadiums? Players on the Baltimore Ravens and Jacksonville Jaguars, all who can potentially benefit from taxpayer dollars at the local, state and federal levels, followed the lead of former San Francisco 49er quarterback Colin Kaepernick Sunday. They kneeled during the national anthem at a game against each other in London. Other teams stayed in their locker rooms for the anthem. The incident happened one day after President Donald Trump criticized professional football players who kneel during the anthem, which set off a war of words on Twitter between the president and professional sports figures. Kaepernick claimed his protest of the national anthem last season stemmed from treatment of blacks by law enforcement, but by the end of the season Kaepernicks demonstrations, joined at that point by other players, led the reason to the leagues TV ratings plunge, ESPN reported. Not only have viewers bid farewell to the NFL but attendees at teams taxpayer-funded stadiums appear to be refusing to fill seats. Last Thursday, the San Francisco 49ers and the L.A. Rams played before a poorly attended crowd. According to Booker and Lankford, for the past 17 years, 36 professional athletic stadiums have been built or renovated by federal tax-exempted municipal bonds. This cost taxpayers $3.2 billion dollars, the Brookings Institute reported last year. Despite claims from local officials and team owners that the construction of these stadiums would create jobs and economic growth, research from the Journal of Economic Perspectives showed there is no statistically significant positive correlation between sports facility construction and economic development, specifically aimed at income growth or job creation. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 24.
#2. To: Tooconservative (#0)
Good. Cut off tax subsidies.
The second they move to actually do it, the GOP will be cowed by libmedia screaming they are trying to destroy America's sport, blah-blah-blah. And Corey Booker typically ensures that nothing he sponsors ever becomes law or has any impact whatsoever. How stupid can those NJ voters be to elect him more than once to anything? Booker is all virtue-signals but determined to leave no actual paper trail of legislative success. He avoids any opportunity to pass his own bills and somehow thinks this will qualify him to be prez.
Right about now, they could win awards by making the NFL owners appear humbled.
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