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Personal Foul: Norquist Loses Points With the Business Community The Greater Milwaukee Committee thinks it's found a way to get more revenue for the Milwaukee Bucks. But one naysayer is Mayor John Norquist. This puts the mayor at odds with both the Milwaukee business community and Senator Herb Kohl, owner of the Milwaukee Bucks. The GMC, the elite group of business leaders, made an announcement earlier this week recommending the Wisconsin Center and the Bradley Center merge into one sports and entertainment district. The Bradley Center's leaders want to renovate their building, adding new luxury suites, club seats, a new restaurant and an adjacent mid-size theater, in order to earn more revenue. The goal is to bail-out the Milwaukee Bucks, and the Bradley Center wants tax money to help pay for the development. Norquist is dubious about the need for tax subsidies. Compared to other tenants at the Bradley Center, he notes, "The Bucks have a much better contract than the Mustangs or any one else." When it comes to financing sports stadiums and arenas, he adds, "The traditional way has been to increase the public share. But the [National Basketball Association] has been more creative in coming up with ways other than just raw public subsidies." Norquist has often irritated business leaders with his criticism of "subsidies." To the GMC, executive director Bob Milbourne says, the Bradley Center project is not asking for public subsidy, but an "investment," because "an investment has a return." The return on the investment would be more development downtown, as the area around the Bradley Center expands into a sports and entertainment district. But to Norquist, "when you get these complicated private public deals, usually it's a private guy with his hands on the public purse." Is that a slap at Herb Kohl, a fellow Democrat? Norquist says all the right things about Kohl: "Retaining the Bucks is important to the community. The owner is well respected. He lives in the community and he won't sell the team." But Kohl is a wealthy man (his net worth has been estimated at $300 million), and city officials have privately squirmed at the idea of a tax break for someone so wealthy, much less a US Senator. Norquist's solution to the Bucks' need for more revenue is to do more ads. One can imagine the Bradley Center board's annoyance at such a lecture. The board may also feel this approach would upset Jane Pettit, who spent $90 million to create this tribute to her father Harry Bradley. The Bradley Center has clearly concluded it needs tax money for its expansion plans, and that's where the Wisconsin Center comes in. The latter was chartered by the state as a taxing district (it collects the hotel-motel and car rental tax), which helps pay for the maintenance of the Midwest Express Center, Auditorium and US Cellular Arena. The GMC hopes the Wisconsin Center will adopt the Bradley Center, so its tax base can be used. But Frank Gimbel, board chair of the Wisconsin Center, rejects the GMC's call for making the Bradley center a "subsidiary" of the Wisconsin Center: "What's a subsidiary going to contribute to the Wisconsin Center, except an open palm? What are we getting except a bill?" Gimbel is known as a tough negotiator and he makes it clear the Wisconsin Center must be the governing entity for any merger, and will consider some changes in its board to help make that happen. But he cautions, "I don't give anything away." Though Norquist only appoints two board members to the Convention Center, he could be an ally of the GMC as it attempts to win Gimbel over. But as Gimbel notes, he has the mayor's support. That won't help the mayor's standing with business leaders. In the meantime, a rather major new story eluded the Spicers. Both this website and the Journal-Sentinel ran stories yesterday summarizing what's contained in the state files on Figueroa and Norquist. MJS reporter Greg Borowski wrote a tough story concluding Figueroa's witnesses "generally were not told of the alleged harassment until long after it began, if ever." If I didn't know better, I'd swear Borowski was trying to ingratiate himself with the mayor. Kohl's colleague, Sen. Russ Feingold, made some noise with his opposition to the death penalty opponent, and was quoted to the effect that 17 of the remaining 19 federal death row inmates are minorities. All content copyright (C)2001 Milwaukeeworld.com, and cannot be reproduced without the express permission of Milwaukeeworld.com |
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