Friday, July 4, 1997
Qualls rips deal with Bengals
Bedinghaus responds with blast at mayor

BY LUCY MAY
The Cincinnati Enquirer

Cincinnati Mayor Roxanne Qualls accused Hamilton County commissioners Thursday of giving away Cincinnati's riverfront to the Bengals in the county's stadium deal with the team.

In a sharply worded letter released Thursday to The Enquirer, Ms. Qualls charges the county with granting the Bengals "veto power" over all riverfront development between the John A. Roebling Suspension Bridge and the team's new stadium.

"The terms of this lease virtually assure that the City's central riverfront will remain a stadium parking lot, and nothing else, for a generation," she writes.

She pledges that the city "will not take any steps which would turn the riverfront over to a single private interest and abandon the community's vision of an economically vibrant district on the river."

The city's cooperation is crucial to the stadium project because the city owns land that the county needs. The Bengals' stadium must be completed by August 2000 or the county faces stiff financial penalties.

Hamilton County Commission President Bob Bedinghaus, to whom the letter was addressed, declined to comment on the letter's specifics. He did offer a stinging statement:

"Normally, I'd attribute this kind of silly nonsense to a full moon. . . . But it's this time of year in every council election when council takes a month break that a lot of these shenanigans tend to happen. I'm not going to overreact to Ms. Qualls' obvious election year political pandering."

Mr. Bedinghaus accused Ms. Qualls and City Manager John Shirey of canceling meetings with the county that could clear up what he called "misunderstandings."

"At this point, I'm going to enjoy the Fourth of July holiday and join everyone else in the region in hoping that Cincinnati City Council doesn't screw up this development," he said.

In a meeting with The Enquirer Tuesday, representatives of the county and Bengals disavowed many of the charges, which had been smoldering for weeks.

"The idea that we gave some kind of veto power to the Bengals is absolutely absurd," County Administrator David Krings said Tuesday.

Rather, Mr. Krings described the county's relationship with the team as a "partnership" that is no different than what any developer would have with a major tenant.

The mayor's letter outlines 10 specific concerns, including the following:

  • She calls it "unprecedented and inappropriate to allow a private entity the rights granted by the lease." She questions whether the Bengals' rights to concessions throughout the entire area means that only team vendors will be at the Underground Railroad Freedom Center planned for the riverfront.

  • She says the "stadium site" defined in the lease includes land that a city-county concept plan dedicates for parks, which she says is also "unprecedented and inappropriate."

  • She charges that the Bengals' parking, concession and approval rights could make development of theaters, retail, restaurants, entertainment and projects like the Freedom Center "impossible."

  • She argues that vague lease language surrounding parking revenue rights could end up granting the team parking revenues for the whole riverfront every day of the year. The language will make it "infeasible" to finance public parking garages, she writes.

  • She says the Bengals have the right to specify the number of parking spaces "without limit" that they need year-round for employees and guests.

  • The fact that the "stadium site" includes city-owned land, which the county has no right to lease, "brings into question the validity of the lease," she writes.

Ms. Qualls' letter is the latest in a series of disputes the city and county have had over the stadium project. The team's new $270 million Paul Brown Stadium will sit roughly between Central Avenue and Elm Street, with a curved Pete Rose Way to the north and Mehring Way to the south.

Troy Blackburn, the Bengals' director of stadium development, said earlier this week that the team wants "desperately" for the central riverfront to be developed because that would help the Bengals.

But the team also wants to make sure the stadium's prized views of the Ohio River and downtown Cincinnati are not blocked by neighboring structures, Mr. Blackburn said.

City economic development officials are negotiating to put a 20-plus screen movie house and a 3-D Theater of the Imagination on the riverfront. Such 3-D theaters can be nine stories high, Mr. Bedinghaus said Tuesday.

But as of Thursday, the county had received no detailed plans for the project, Mr. Bedinghaus said.

Previous stories

.COA complains take a back seat June 5, 1997
.Next hurdle: Stadium land May 31, 1997
.Bengals won't sell naming rights May 31, 1997
.WELCOME TO PAUL BROWN STADIUM May 30, 1997
.NEXT GENERATION OF BROWNS MAKE THE DEAL May 30, 1997
.It's goal to go for stadium May 29, 1997
.Details remain before construction begins May 29, 1997
.Stadium victory at hand May 26, 1997
.Terms of the deal May 26, 1997
.Regional effort fills seats May 25, 1997
.Bengals reach sales goal May 24, 1997
.Hold on: Shirey wants to boost admissions tax May 24, 1997
.Brown, county race deadline May 21, 1997
.NFL committee OK's lease May 20, 1997
.Ticket tax increase gains steam May 20, 1997
.Stadium team tries to trim $48M May 6, 1997
.Bengals ask lease by May 20 April 30, 1997
.Stadium redesign well received April 25, 1997
.Bengals leery of Wedge April 9, 1997
.Stadium price tag growing April 3,1997
.Stadium gaining ground? April 2,1997
.Bengals won't sign till tax dies March 25,1997
.Mike Brown's 'Letter to the Editor' March 25, 1997
.Bengals balk at tax plan March 24,1997
.Bengals want county blitz on seat licenses March 21,1997
.City balks at size of stadium March 15,1997
.Seat sales on target for team to stay Feb. 19,1997
.'The Jungle' moving to Central Ave. Feb. 14, 1997
. Stadium site to be announced this week Published Feb. 9, 1997
. Seat license sales pass $20M goal Published Feb. 7, 1997
. Consultants favor Riverfront West Published Dec. 20, 1996
. Seat licenses $300 to $1,500 Published Dec. 18, 1996
. Rules, procedure for buying seat licenses Published Dec. 18, 1996
. Designs draw oohs and ahhs Published Dec. 17, 1996
. Architect's drawings revealed Published Dec. 8, 1996
. Site selection is a decision of a lifetime Published Dec. 2, 1996