Lester Bagley, vice president of public affairs and stadium development for the Vikings, believes the team will still get a stadium bill passed during a special session of the Legislature.
However, one big change will have to be made in the bill before the Legislature considers it, and that would be the elimination of the proposed income tax surcharge on the salaries of NFL players. Another type of tax will have to fund the stadium because NFL sources believe it's illegal.
"The tax on the players is questionable," Bagley said, "because the NFL has raised the concern that it may not be constitutional to tax one class of people, to single them out.
"There's a question about the income tax piece, but the sports memorabilia, the lottery scratch-off, the satellite download -- those all are viable finance options that are still in play. I think there's enough, if you raise the tax high enough, there's enough there to cover the state's obligation.
"You may have to go higher than what the bill says, or right now the legislation says $2 million from the lottery, but as we know, the Vikings, in their lottery scratch-off game last year in 2010, sold $13 million in lottery scratch-offs. So maybe we take that $2 million and ratchet it up to $4 [million] or $5 million. There's things like that you can do, but that should be enough to cover the state's obligation."
But nothing is going to happen with the stadium bill until the budget deficit is settled.
Bagley said the Vikings still are meeting with the Legislature and the governor's office on the stadium bill.
"Well you know we're charging forward, we don't really have a choice but to move it forward as best we can," Bagley said. "We're optimistic. I think [Vikings owners Zygi and Mark Wilf] have done what they've been asked. They put $407 million on the table, plus about $20 million a year in operating cost and capital improvement. They put significant capital at risk. They've got a great site, they've got a great local partner, so I think we're in good shape because we delivered. The Vikings delivered, the Wilfs delivered what they were asked to deliver."