By Rachel E. Stassen-Berger
After days of intense, closed-door meetings, DFL Gov. Mark Dayton and the Minnesota Vikings on Thursday morning announced an agreement for what the governor called, "a new people's stadium" in downtown Minneapolis.
The new $975 million stadium would be open by 2016, under the plan. The deal remains contingent upon legislative and Minneapolis City Council approval.
"Now the real work begins," Dayton said. He was accompanied by lawmakers from both sides of the aisle, Minneapolis Mayor R.T. Rybak, Vikings owners and others who have been wrangling a deal for months.
Dayton asked the Legislature to act quickly and the Minneapolis City Council to "consider carefully what is at stake."
Dayton said the arrangement was "the best deal we could negotiate" but, as with most deals, made no one completely pleased. But he said, it was a deal that could work.
There are serious doubts about any Vikings stadium deal from both governing bodies. Backers said they would immediately start wooing lawmakers, who have said they cannot give any idea a specific vote until they got the plan.
According to the agreement, the Vikings would pay more than 50 percent of the construction and operating expenses. The state would contribute $398 million from charitable electronic pulltabs. The city of Minneapolis would contribute $150 million in up-front costs and then $188.7 million operating and capital expenses, for a total of $338.7 million. That would come from existing Convention Center sales and hospitality taxes. The Vikings would contribute $427 million in up-front costs and $327.1 million operating and capital expenses, for a total of $754.1 million. The new stadium would be owned by a new stadium authority, which would have gubernatorial and city of Minneapolis appointees.