Hartford’s New Baseball Stadium to Open After Delays, Lawsuits, Debt, and Now a FBI Probe

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Hartford’s New Baseball Stadium to Open After Delays, Lawsuits, Debt, and Now a FBI Probe

Dunkin' Donuts Stadium in Hartford, PHOTO: Yard Goats Facebook
It should be a day of celebration. The new Dunkin’ Donuts Park — home of the Hartford Yard Goats — is set to open in dreary Hartford, CT. But the controversies tied to the new park are only casting a greater cloud over the financially struggling city.

The stadium has had delays and disputes, and is crushing the city financially -- and now is facing news of a federal investigation.

Federal Probe

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According to the Hartford Courant, “Federal criminal investigators have launched an investigation into the problem-plagued construction of the Dunkin' Donuts Park, the long-awaited home of the Hartford Yard Goats minor league baseball team, multiple sources have confirmed."

"FBI agents have been contacting people with ties to, or knowledge of, the long-delayed stadium project in recent weeks, and have gathered information on expenditures of public funds toward its $71-million cost so far, according to several people with knowledge of the probe. All talked on condition of anonymity.”

Hartford Courant reports an ongoing FBI probe.
This is not Hartford’s first federal investigation tied to a stadium. Hartford and private developers were working on redeveloping soccer venue Dillion Stadium, a project that was being overseen by former Providence Planning and Development Director Tom Deller - he served under David Cicilline. In Hartford, Deller served as Development Director and was forced to resign over his management of the project and $1.8 million in improper payments. Deller has returned to RI.

By June of 2016, the two developers were charged by federal officials. The Hartford Courant reported, “James C. Duckett Jr. and Mitchell Anderson, who sold Hartford officials on an ambitious but ill-fated plan to redevelop Dillon Stadium, were arrested Thursday on federal charges alleging the pair pocketed hundreds of thousands of dollars in a conspiracy to defraud the city and subcontractors.”

New stadium in Hartford
Fiscal Impact

The similarities between the financing scheme for a new stadium for the PawSox in Pawtucket and the newly unveiled Hartford Stadium are hard to assess, as PawSox Chairman Larry Lucchino has yet to publicly unveil his plan and ask for public financing. 

The Dunkin' Donuts stadium was funded by the City of Hartford.

On Tuesday, the Wall Street Journal reported that Hartford’s budget, already in shambles, is being crushed by debt payments for the new stadium.

The Wall Street Journal reports, “Mayor Luke Bronin, who initially opposed the stadium but then reluctantly supported it, said the ballpark alone will never generate enough money to pay back the debt. The original idea was that surrounding development will generate funds to pay off the loans and bring in additional tax revenue for the city."

Mr. Bronin plans to borrow $20 million in bonds in the coming weeks to cover a shortfall in the city’s budget.

Jeffrey Dorfman,  University of Georgia Professor of Economics, told GoLocal New Editor Kate Nagle on GoLocal LIVE on April 5, “What should Rhode Islanders ask? What sort of guarantee is there, if there aren't enough taxes to pay for bonds? We built a minor league stadium 40 miles from here that way -- then there weren't enough taxes. Are taxpayers on the hook? Generally the answer is yes -- the answer is better if it's not, and the team owners have to pay, but you don't see that very often.”

Larry Lucchino, PawSox Chairman wants public financing for the Stadium in RI
Dorfman wrote for Forbes a in-depth article titled, "Publicly Financed Sports Stadiums Are A Game That Taxpayers Lose.”

Another leading sports stadium expert, Craig Depken at the University of North Carolina Charlotte, who wrote the book, "Fan Loyalty and Stadium Funding" and is an expert on the issue told GoLocal, “Historically minor league baseball has had a lot more fluidity -- we know that -- when a major league stadium doesn't own their stadium they're less likely to leave."

"There's more fluidity in the minor leagues. One concern is if a team doesn't own their stadium, they're more likely to leave," he said. 

 


Pawsox Stadium Timeline

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