Originally published March 5, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified March 5, 2008 at 10:23 AM
Oklahoma City passes arena tax to lure Sonics
While Seattle leaders scramble to build support for an arena plan to keep the Sonics in town, Oklahoma City voters on Tuesday overwhelmingly...
While Seattle leaders scramble to build support for an arena plan to keep the Sonics in town, Oklahoma City voters on Tuesday overwhelmingly embraced a $120 million tax package aimed at luring the team as that city's first major-league sports franchise.
More than 60 percent of Oklahoma City voters favored the 15-month, one-cent sales tax to fix up the city's Ford Center arena and build a new NBA practice facility, according to unofficial final returns from the Oklahoma County Election Board.
Seattle leaders downplayed the result, saying they'll fight to enforce the Sonics' lease at KeyArena while working on an arena package to keep the team in its home of 41 years.
"It really doesn't have a bearing on our dealings with the Sonics," said Marty McOmber, a spokesman for Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels.
Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett declared victory during a vote-watching party at a restaurant in the city's Bricktown entertainment district. "We will not let you down. We know we have some work to do and we'll get to it starting first thing tomorrow morning," Cornett said.
The Oklahoma vote was aimed at sending a powerful signal to the NBA Board of Governors. At its meeting next month, league owners will vote on whether to approve Sonics owner Clay Bennett's request to move the team to his hometown.
Bennett issued a written statement Tuesday praising Oklahoma City voters for "their continued commitment to excellence."
The vote stands in stark contrast to Seattle's only public vote related to the Sonics. Seattle voters in 2006 overwhelmingly approved an initiative to restrict taxpayer subsidies for any arena upgrade for the Sonics or other professional sports teams.
Despite Tuesday's vote, the Sonics' future remains up in the air. The Sonics have a lease at Seattle's KeyArena through September 2010, and the city has sued to keep the team from leaving early.
Brian Robinson, co-founder of the fan group Save our Sonics, said the Oklahoma results won't determine the fate of the Sonics if leaders here come up with a viable arena alternative before the lease runs out.
"This has never been about Seattle versus Oklahoma," Robinson said. "Oklahoma City is likely to get NBA basketball. What we've got to focus on is making sure it's not our team."
Roy Williams, president of the Greater Oklahoma City Chamber, said, "The Sonics are in Seattle, and the Sonics can stay in Seattle. That's in the hands of Seattle. Seattle can still keep their team if they're willing to do what it takes to pay for it.
![]()
"It's not ours to win. It's Seattle's to lose."
Oklahoma City's Ford Center opened in 2002 and hosted the New Orleans Hornets for two seasons after Hurricane Katrina. Planned upgrades include restaurants, clubs, suites and new locker rooms.
If no team shifts to Oklahoma City before June 2009, the one-cent sales tax passed by voters runs out after 12 months and the practice facility and any NBA-specific improvements to the Ford Center will not be built.
Cornett said the arena vote would help put Oklahoma City on a world stage. The Greater Oklahoma City Chamber's campaign said the vote was about becoming a "Big League City."
Meanwhile, in Seattle, political and business leaders have been trying to garner support for a $300 million KeyArena expansion they hope could keep the Sonics in the city. The cost would be split 50-50 between taxpayers and a group of local investors said to be willing to buy the Sonics from Bennett.
That group includes Costco CEO Jim Sinegal and Seattle developer Matt Griffin. They are backed by other prominent local business leaders who have not revealed their identities.
Griffin said the Oklahoma City vote does not change the group's strategy because "we assumed it would pass."
But Griffin, who met with Gov. Christine Gregoire and legislative leaders this week, said he did not know whether there would be any movement on a Seattle arena package before the Legislature adjourns next week.
Seattle Times staff reporter Jim Brunner and Associated Press reporter Jeff Latzke contributed to this report.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 9:40 PM
Portland stops Orlando, which plays without suspended Dwight Howard
Chicago Bulls hand Miami Heat fourth straight loss | NBA
Local NBA connections: Catching up with Martell Webster
New Jersey earns 137-136 victory over Toronto in 3 OT in London
Ex-Washington Husky Nate Robinson has knee surgery | NBA

Dear Tom and Ray: My wife Olivia's first car (in the early '70s) was a purple-sparkle dune buggy built on a VW Bug frame — one of the least-safe...
Post a comment
- Drivers face lengthy detours around I-5 bridge collapse
- Officials explore use of temporary, portable bridge as quick fix
- Murder suspect son of former Bush aide
- As car sinks, young man keeps cool, finds escape
- Mariners battered again
- W.Va. town transfixed by teen girls' murder plot
- Why the Mariners have gone from pitching rich to pitching fits | Jerry Brewer
- Judge: No bail for parents in second faith-healing death
- Green River faculty: no confidence in college president
- UW softball advances to College World Series
- Game thread, Mariners vs. Rangers, May 25 (plus more notes)
435 - Vote on gay Scouts comes at emotional moment
272 - Mariners find new, old ways to lose their seventh straight
95 - Inslee: State looking at possible quick fix to bridge
89 - Judge: Arizona sheriff’s office targets Latinos
78 - Triunfel starting at second for Mariners
55 - ‘We don’t need another lawyer,’ says businesswoman running for mayor
44 - Protesters march against Monsanto in 250 cities
36 - Mariners battered again
34 - Judge: No bail for parents in second faith-healing death
31
- ‘Miracles’: 3 survive I-5 collapse
- More applicants make getting into UW tougher this year
- Drivers face lengthy detours around I-5 bridge collapse
- Bridge collapse will cause holiday travel headaches
- Span wasn’t built to take critical hit
- McNerney: Boeing will squeeze suppliers and cut jobs
- Officials explore use of temporary, portable bridge as quick fix
- Green River faculty: no confidence in college president
- As car sinks, young man keeps cool, finds escape
- Shopping-mall kiosks are little gold mines







