Republican leaders said Wednesday that their new Minnesota Vikings stadium plan would likely require a roof, but offered few other details on their still-sketchy proposal.
After Gov. Mark Dayton earlier in the day called the Republican plan a last-minute "hare-brained scheme", House and Senate Republican leaders met with the DFL governor and said afterward they would move forward with it providing Dayton and the Vikings were willing to work together on it.
But even in the volatile world of stadium politics, the events of the past two days left much confusion.
House Majority Leader Matt Dean, R-Dellwood, said the new plan would use a more stable form of state financing – general obligation bonds – than the charitable gaming revenue Dayton wanted to use to fund the state's $398 million stadium contribution. He also added that using general obligation bonds meant the project would need a roof.
"We hope this is fruitful," Dean said of the sudden talks at the state Capitol surrounding the new Republican stadium plan. "We're trying to find a solution that the Legislature can agree to.
"If it's not productive and it's not helpful, then we can move on to other solutions to try to get done to get out" and adjourn this year's legislative session.
Dean had earlier called the new plan a "turf down" proposal, saying that the state would take a minimalist approach to the $1 billion stadium and only pay for its surrounding infrastructure. He said the proposal would pay for 25 percent, or "north of $250 million", of the stadium's total construction.
Dayton and DFL leaders said that while they would study the proposal they preferred having the House and Senate vote on the governor's plan, which would also build the stadium in downtown Minneapolis. Both the Vikings and Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak said Tuesday they did not support the new, last-minute plan, but Dean said Republicans were attempting to reach out to city officials.