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Wisconsin GOP proposes ticket fee, smaller state contribution to Brewers stadium repair plan

FILE - American Family Field is seen Sept. 15, 2023, in Milwaukee. The Wisconsin state Assembly was set Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2023, to approve a Republican-authored plan to spend more than half-a-billion dollars to help cover repairs at the Milwaukee Brewers' stadium.
Morry Gash
/
AP
FILE - American Family Field is seen Sept. 15, 2023, in Milwaukee. The Wisconsin state Assembly was set Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2023, to approve a Republican-authored plan to spend more than half-a-billion dollars to help cover repairs at the Milwaukee Brewers' stadium.

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Republicans in the Wisconsin state Senate proposed tweaks Tuesday to their plan to help fund repairs to the Milwaukee Brewers stadium that would scale back the state's contribution by about $36 million and impose a surcharge on tickets to non-baseball events.

The Legislature's finance committee was set to vote on the changes Wednesday. Approval could set up a floor vote in the Senate as early as next week.

The Brewers contend that their 22-year-old stadium, American Family Field, needs extensive repairs. The team argues that the stadium's glass outfield doors, seats and concourses should be replaced and that luxury suites and the video scoreboard need upgrades. The stadium's signature retractable roof, fire suppression systems, parking lots, elevators and escalators need work as well, according to the team.

During early discussions of the plan Brewers officials hinted they might leave Milwaukee if they didn't get public dollars for the repairs. Rick Schlesinger, the Brewers' president of business operations, appeared to walk that back at a Senate hearing last month, saying the team wants to remain in the city “for the next generation.”

The state Assembly last month approved a plan that calls for the state to contribute $411 million and the city of Milwaukee and Milwaukee County to contribute a combined $135 million. The Brewers have said they would contribute $100 million to repairs and extend their lease at the stadium through 2050 in exchange for the public funds. The lease extension would keep Major League Baseball in its smallest market for another 27 years.

Sen. Dan Feyen released an amendment Tuesday to the Assembly plan that would reduce the state's payout by $20 million and impose a $2 ticket surcharge on non-baseball events such as concerts or monster truck shows. Suite users would face an $8 ticket surcharge for non-baseball events. The surcharge is projected to generate $14.1 million, which would be used to further defray the state contribution. The end result would be a $36.1 million reduction in the overall state contribution.

The team's rent payments would also increase by $10 million between 2024 and 2050.

The amendment further calls for a biennial financial audit of the stadium district that administers public funding for American Family Field through 2050.

Feyen declined to comment on the amendment as he left a Senate floor session Tuesday afternoon. Senate Majority Leader Devin LeMahieu said Senate Republicans planned to discuss the amendment in caucus Tuesday afternoon but declined further comment.

A spokesperson for the Brewers had no immediate comment.

Senate approval of the amendment would send the bill back to the Assembly. Both houses must pass an identical version of the legislation before it can go to Democratic Gov. Tony Evers, who can sign it into law or veto it.

Assembly Speaker Robin Vos said he hadn’t studied Feyen’s amendment but said a surcharge on non-Brewer events would be reasonable if it defrays the overall state contribution.

“Hopefully (the amendment) is what gets it over the finish line,” Vos said.

Evers spokesperson Britt Cudaback didn’t immediately respond to a message inquiring about whether the governor supports the changes.

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This story has been updated to correct the total amount of the state contribution reduction to $36.1 million and correct the increase in Brewers’ rent payments to $10 million.

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Associated Press writer Scott Bauer in Madison contributed to this report.

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