A Vikings official said Friday that Gov. Mark Dayton and others are "jumping the gun" by expressing outrage over the team's interest in establishing license fees for premier seating in a soon-to-be-built $975 million downtown Minneapolis football stadium.
"A lot of people are jumping the gun as to their thinking on what we'd do," said Lester Bagley, the team's vice president for stadium development and public affairs. "We're doing our homework. That's all we're doing."
Bagley's comments came at the end of a week in which Gov. Mark Dayton sharply criticized the team and its owners for not being forthright during stadium financing negotiations last spring about the possibility of charging season-ticket holders a personal seat license or "stadium builder's license" fee.
The team began surveying season-ticket holders on the issue last week. The fees, which generally are a one-time payment, would be paid on top of the cost of a season ticket. Revenue generated by the fees, which ensure season-ticket holders premier seating, would count as part of the team's share of stadium construction costs.
"The project's strong support came from many regular Minnesotans, not just rich Minnesotans, because they believed the Vikings are also their team," Dayton wrote in a stern letter to Viking owners Zygi and Mark Wilf on Tuesday. "If a new stadium were to betray that trust, it would be better that it not be built."
Dayton later said that he had not been aware last spring of the scope of the Vikings seat license plans.
Bagley reiterated Friday that the team was "very above board" about its desire to pursue the option to help finance its portion of stadium construction costs.
The state and city of Minneapolis are contributing $498 million to construction with the team picking up the remainder through a variety of sources, including an NFL loan, stadium naming rights and possibly seat license fees.