Current:Home > InvestTalks on luring NHL’s Capitals and NBA’s Wizards to Virginia are over, city of Alexandria says -Global Capital Summit
Talks on luring NHL’s Capitals and NBA’s Wizards to Virginia are over, city of Alexandria says
View
Date:2025-04-17 09:49:41
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Negotiations aimed at luring the NHL’s Washington Capitals and the NBA’s Washington Wizards to northern Virginia have “ended” and the proposal to create a development district with a new arena for the teams “will not move forward,” the city of Alexandria said Wednesday.
Virginia’s House speaker also confirmed he was told that Ted Leonsis, majority owner of the teams, is no longer considering a deal to relocate them from the District of Columbia.
House Speaker Don Scott told The Associated Press he received that news from Justin Wilson, the mayor of Alexandria, where Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin had hoped to land the teams.
The city said in a statement posted to its website that it was disappointed in the outcome. The development came after an incentive plan offered by Youngkin failed to gain traction in the Democratic-controlled General Assembly.
“We negotiated a framework for this opportunity in good faith and participated in the process in Richmond in a way that preserved our integrity. We trusted this process and are disappointed in what occurred between the Governor and General Assembly,” the city’s statement said.
Daniel Gleick, a spokesman for D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, said he had no information he could share “at this time.”
Youngkin’s press office had no immediate comment. A spokeswoman for the teams’ parent company didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Youngkin and Leonsis announced at a public event in December that they had reached an understanding on the outlines of a plan calling for a new $2 billion development district with a new arena in Alexandria, just a few miles from where the teams currently play.
The proposal called for the General Assembly to set up an authority that would issue bonds to finance the majority of the project, backed partly by the city and state governments and repaid through a mix of projected tax revenues recaptured from the development.
Youngkin and other supporters said the development would generate tens of thousands of jobs, along with new tax revenues beyond what would have been needed to cover the financing.
But the plan faced opposition from labor unions, Alexandria residents concerned about traffic and D.C. officials who feared the loss of the teams would devastate downtown Washington.
Youngkin and other backers also failed to win over powerful Democratic Sen. L. Louise Lucas of Portsmouth, who chairs the Senate’s budget-writing committee. She used that position to block the legislation, citing a range of concerns but foremost the financing structure of the deal: The use of bonds put taxpayers and the state’s finances at risk, Lucas said.
Wilson, the Alexandria mayor, said in a video statement, “We are disappointed that this proposal was not able to be thoughtfully considered on its merits ... and instead got caught up in partisan warfare in Richmond.”
Last week the attorney for the District of Columbia wrote a letter to Monumental Sports & Entertainment, the teams’ parent company, saying their lease kept them in the downtown arena through 2047. The company had disputed that assertion.
Leonsis, founder and CEO of Monumental, had shifted his tone on social media in recent days, pointing to large crowds in Washington’s Capital One Arena this month for everything from the Capitals and Wizards to ACC Tournament basketball and a Zach Bryan concert. He posted Wednesday that Monumental expected over 400,000 fans to pass through turnstiles in March.
Leonsis was notably not on the ice Sunday for a ceremony honoring longtime Capitals winger T.J. Oshie for reaching the milestone of 1,000 NHL games. He was booed by some fans when his message to Oshie came up on arena video screens.
___
Associated Press writer Stephen Whyno contributed to this report.
veryGood! (3341)
Related
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- California doctor who intentionally drove Tesla off cliff will not face trial
- Pedestrian traffic deaths decline for first time since pandemic after 40-year high in 2022
- It's a 'Forrest Gump' reunion! Tom Hanks, Robin Wright get de-aged in new film 'Here'
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Marilyn Monroe's final home saved from demolition, designated a Los Angeles cultural monument
- EPA Urges US Army to Test for PFAS in Creeks Flowing Out of Former Seneca Army Depot
- Skye Blakely injures herself on floor during training at U.S. Olympic gymnastics trials
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Nicole Kidman and daughter Sunday twin in chic black dresses at Balenciaga show: See photos
Ranking
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- What you need to know for NBC's 2024 Paris Olympics coverage
- George Latimer wins NY-16 primary, CBS News projects, beating incumbent Jamaal Bowman
- ‘No egos,’ increased transparency and golden retrievers. How USA Gymnastics came back from the brink
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- 2024 NBA draft: Top prospects, rankings, best available players
- 'Jackass' alum Bam Margera gets probation after fight with brother
- Protests over Kenya tax hike proposal reportedly turn deadly in Nairobi
Recommendation
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Elaine Thompson-Herah to miss Paris Olympics after withdrawing from trials
The US Tennis Association can do more to prevent abuse such as sexual misconduct, a review says
2024 NBA mock draft: Final projections for every Round 1 pick
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Walgreens to take a hard look at underperforming stores, could shutter hundreds more
Angel Reese is a throwback to hardcore players like Dennis Rodman. That's a compliment.
Oregon wildfires: Fast-growing Darlene 3 fire burns over 2,400 acres prompting evacuations