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The Latest On a New San Diego Chargers Stadium


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The latest in the San Diego UT today. I'm not sure I like the word "terminal". :wacko:

 

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CHARGERS' SITE SEARCH ENTERING TERMINAL STAGE

 

September 11, 2008

 

The conceptual art shows a football stadium tucked unobtrusively in the northeast corner of an enormous bayfront platform, a project so stupendous that the cruise ships depicted at anchor could be bathtub toys.

 

A new home for the Chargers or an unpublished excerpt from Sam Coleridge's opium dream? Xanadu or Xanadon't? Come November, you make the call. In denying the Port of San Diego's request for an immediate stay, the Fourth District Court of Appeal yesterday removed the last obstacle to a public vote on a massive waterfront makeover at the 10th Avenue Marine Terminal. What that means depends on where you sit.

 

“I can't read all of the tea leaves,” proponent Frank Gallagher said yesterday, “but I do know this: It could be a solution for the Chargers.”

 

Yet . . .

 

“The idea of the Chargers or any type of sports stadium being located on the Marine terminal is based on at least a dozen hypotheticals,” said Lani Lutar, vice president of the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce. “It's pie in the sky.”

 

And . . .

 

“Even if it passes – and the (California State) lands commission is going to come after this in nanoseconds – it will be tied up in court for a long, long time,” predicted UCSD professor Steve Erie.

 

Still . . .

 

“If the voters approve it, it probably has to go forward,” City Attorney Mike Aguirre said. “Whatever the voters decide to do, I will do.”

 

Though the Chargers have yet to publicly endorse the clunkily named “Port of San Diego Marine Freight Preservation and Bayfront Redevelopment Initiative,” Aguirre's stated neutrality could be a critical consideration. One of the reasons the team claims to have cast its covetous eyes on Chula Vista is the purported difficulty of dealing with the city of San Diego so long as Aguirre is in office.

 

Should the election eliminate either Aguirre himself or his potential objections, it could signal a significant break in the city's stadium stalemate. Yet even with both sides' polling showing voters in favor of the initiative with less than two months of campaigning left, the hurdles are both high and numerous.

 

Those hurdles include engineering, earthquake and environmental issues, military concerns, jurisdiction questions, a curious coalition of political opposition and a lengthy list of potential litigation. Asked if he expected to live long enough to see his project completed, 66-year-old developer Richard Chase acknowledged: “It will be close. But my children will see it.”

 

What Chase would have them see is nearly 100 acres of hotels, shopping, entertainment and/or football elevated 40 feet above a modernized Marine Terminal. What Port officials fear is that the elevation promised in the proposal is a ruse; that the developers are misleading the public through a tightly worded initiative that could imperil or eliminate the terminal and lead to cheaper ground-level construction.

 

“The board of port commissioners believe it is deceptive and would hurt maritime as a whole,” said Irene McCormack, a spokesman for the San Diego Unified Port District.

 

“It's a very complicated place to put anything. Any time you put anything along the water, it takes a lot longer to get it done. . . . When you build a double deck, how does maritime exist while you're building it?”

 

Gallagher claims the Marine Terminal operation is already “in cardiac arrest,” that the amount of tonnage unloaded has slipped 55 percent over the past three years. McCormack did not dispute that number, but said her figures reflect the port district as a whole (including National City) and show an increase.

 

The larger issue, though, is intent. The port and the chamber suspect the developers are trying to appropriate lucrative public land for their own enrichment. Chase and Gallagher insist their vision includes a commitment to preserving the terminal and protecting the jobs of dockworkers.

 

“The plan we have is to accommodate them, not to run them off,” Gallagher said. “These longshoremen have had jobs there for generations. I look at that as a sacred obligation we have to the longshoremen. Those jobs are sacrosanct.”

 

Both sides agree that the depth of the bay would make the Marine Terminal difficult to replicate in National City or other sites. While unloading cargo would not seem the wisest use of prime real estate, there are only so many spots that can service the larger ships.

 

While communicating the complexities of the issue will be a challenge for all concerned, gauging the Chargers' interest ought to be easy. Absent any sign of palpable progress in Chula Vista, or attractive alternatives in other markets, Team Spanos is bound to embrace any stadium idea that shows traction.

 

Should the 10th Avenue initiative succeed, the Chargers can be expected to try to wield their lease as leverage. They would likely offer to vacate the Qualcomm Stadium site, and unlock its development potential for the city, in exchange for downtown construction subsidies.

 

“We're obviously highly interested in the process leading up to the vote,” said Chargers spokesman Mark Fabiani. “But our focus remains on Chula Vista and will remain in Chula Vista.”

 

At least until Nov. 4.

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