The state Senate on Wednesday rejected a proposal for a $2 million study on how to replace the Metrodome with a new publicly subsidized stadium for the Minnesota Vikings.
The Vikings expressed disappointment at the loss of the study, which was intended to help launch a major campaign during the 2009 legislative session for a $954 million stadium on the Metrodome site in Minneapolis.
The study was stripped from the Senate tax bill on a vote of 41 to 22. It had been approved last week by the Senate Taxes Committee at the behest of the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission, which owns the Metrodome.
The study would have directed the commission and the Vikings to arrive at a recommendation by January for a new retractable-roof stadium on the Metrodome site.
Funding for the study would have come from Metrodome reserves and the team.
Senators backing the report said they need to know their options before the Vikings' Metrodome lease expires after the 2011 season and the team becomes free to move.
But Sen. John Marty, DFL-Roseville, said that it was "a slippery slope" from a simple study to the large outlay of public funding that the team hopes to obtain for the stadium.
Under the Vikings' plan, public funding would be needed to pay for three-quarters of a $954 million stadium; the balance would come from the team and the National Football League.