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About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 2024)
vides says the team expects to raise another $10 million through parking fees, advertising and naming rights and sponsorships. But right now, Benavides says, “It's hard to sell naming rights to a stadium that doesn't exist.” The Ems’ only direct investment: $10 million in prepaid rent for a 20-year lease. In 2022, Lane County increased its transient lodging tax (TLT) and car rental taxes from 9.5 percent to 11.5 percent. (The rates are 12 percent in unincorporated parts of the county.) The proposed amount of $35 million will have to be paid back into the fund by taking 1.5 percent of all TLT annually for 20 years. The Lane County Board of Commissioners has yet to allocate any funds from the increase. Lane County Administrator Steve Mokrohisky plans to have a fi nal slant • What we're reading : Kwame Alex- ander's This Is the Honey: An anthol- ogy of contemporary Black poets. It's a read that takes you to another world, as all good poetry will do. • This week is our annual garden- ing issue — and we noticed that down- town grocery Kiva says Double Up Food Bucks can be used to purchase produce starts! Any other places making it easier for folks to grow healthy food? Let us know at Editor@EugeneWeekly.com. • Just when we were pondering if it was time to do a dog story, The New 6 M A R C H 2 1 , 2 0 2 4 operational agreement ready to be presented to the Board of Commissioners before the May ballot. Only then will it be decided if the commissioners keep the Lane Events Center location and TLT funding on the table. The Eugene City Council has approved a measure that will authorize a $15 million general obligation bond to help pay for the stadium. Property taxpayers in the city — and not revenue from the stadium — will cover the debt. The measure would authorize an additional 0.08 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value. For a home valued at $300,000, that’s an additional $24 a year. Emblazoned in his Ems gear, Eugene City Councilor Matt Keating is confi dent that putting forth the bond measure vote to his constituents was the right decision. He says this will give Eugene voters a choice to say, “Yes, York Times, Sunday March 17, beat us to it with “How exactly did dogs take over the world?” We have two big offi ce dogs at the Weekly. Go to the beauty shop and a little dog greets you. Go to the barber shop and a little dog greets you. It would be better to have dogs running the world than some candidates we can think of. With the May primary election on the horizon, it’s time for us to start interviewing candidates for endorse- ments. We will see what the dogs think. • After many weeks of hoping that the Duck men basketballers would be invited to the NCAA tour- nament, the Ducks did not wait for an invitation. They knocked down the front door by winning the Pac-12 tour- nament. They had to come from behind we believe in a project that benefi ts this community.” Eugene City Councilor Jennifer Yeh was the lone vote in opposition to the plan in February. She says that it is the city’s responsibility to send bond measures to the voters only when a project, like the construction of a minor-league baseball stadium, is fully planned out with all other funding determined. “Voters should be able to rely on their city council to, at a minimum, determine if a project or plan is viable before they send a bond measure for consideration,” Yeh writes in an email to Eugene Weekly. “We can’t tell voters how this project will be paid for, how it will be maintained or if it will even happen, yet we are asking for their money.” For more information from opponents to the stadium, check out 100MillionDollarStadium.com. The Ems are pitching the stadium at SaveOurEms.com. three nights in a row in the most impres- sive and entertaining stretch of Duck basketball in years. As the No. 11 seed in the South Region, Oregon’s fi rst tour- nament game is March 21 against No. 6 seed South Carolina, and from here on out it is win or go home. • News we are following : Anony- mous Student News and the Daily Emer- ald recently covered the protest over the University of Oregon student govern- ment’s decision to schedule its spring concert on the same day as the Native American Student Union’s annual Moth- er’s Day Powwow for the second year in a row. ASUO said on its Instagram it is working to cancel the concert. The UO’s annual powwow is May 10 and 11, and Lane Community College’s is April 6. • The largest pickleball facility in the Pacifi c Northwest is aiming to break ground in May 2025 and fi nish construction by that fall. This future location is at Lane Community College. Seems like the biggest complaint we hear about the sport is the sound of the balls and the loss of tennis courts — is the new facility the solution? • A panel of the three Eugene mayoral candidates spoke at the City Club of Eugene meeting March 15: Kaarin Knudson, Shanaé Joyce Stringer and perennial candidate Stefan Strek. We were impressed by Knudson's report that she has knocked on 500 doors as of last Thursday. City Club will meet at noon on Friday in the Maple Room at Inn at the Fifth to discuss STAR Voting, which will also appear on the May ballot. E U G E N E W E E K LY . C O M