November 18, 2009   |2 Comments Uncategorized

SILVERDOME LOSES ITS SHINE, WASTED TAX DOLLARS ON DISPLAY

In 1975, $55.7 million of public funding built the Pontiac Silverdome.

The NFL stadium in Detroit, Michigan was auctioned off today for $583,000.

That’s $7.25 a seat.

While it is tough to see how hard the the economic dowturn has hit Motown, this article from Bloomberg clearly identifies the dangers of siphoning tax payer dollars toward sports stadiums.  Billionaires have been buying sports franchises and successfully leveraging the local goverment and taxpayers to pay for their new toys.

It continues to happen today except the scale has climbed from 10′s of millions of dollars to billions in donations from you and me.

If you sit on the sidelines, these abuses on the sports fan will continue.

JOIN THE COALITION today to be a part of the solution.

November 13, 2009   |No Comments Uncategorized

Blakeman makes the case for the SFC in The Politico

The Politico – The Arena

Sports fans frustrated by soaring ticket prices, game blackouts, the lack of a college football playoff, and other often-repeated gripes finally have an advocate in Washington. A non-profit organization founded and run by politically active sports fans like me launches this weekend. The Sports Fans Coalition aims to use grass-roots and inside-the-beltway advocacy to ensure that fans have a seat at the table when important public policy decisions impacting sports are made in the Nation’s capital.

Whether it’s the proposed new football stadium in Los Angeles receiving scores of public benefits, college football teams in Utah or Texas being shut out of the National Championship, or sports fans in Detroit, Jacksonville, or Philadelphia cut off from watching their home team’s games on TV, SFC intends to fight the good fight on behalf of fans.

The Coalition is run by a Board and by individual Members who sign up online; anyone can join; and there’s no cost, The bipartisan Board of Directors includes myself, David Goodfriend, a former Clinton White House and congressional staffer, consumer advocate Gigi Sohn, sports journalist Dave Zirin, and former technology CEO Mark Walsh.

Giving sports fans a voice in DC is about as bi-partisan an issue as baseball and apple pie and this will be a fan-driven organization. We’re asking fans to get off the sidelines and onto the playing field here in DC, to help us take a stand.

The Coalition also includes two advisory boards, one for non-profit groups (Media Access Project and the Computer and Communications Assn.), and one for corporate contributors (currently Verizon). Under the Coalition’s bylaws, which are available on its website, (sportsfans.org) advisory board members have no control rights.

The coalition’s policy agenda will tackle several major issues:

•If public resources went into building a local stadium, there should be affordable seating throughout that stadium and no game s should be “blacked out” from television coverage, a practice currently required by professional sports leagues (if a stadium has not sold out) and supported by federal laws.

•If public resources go to a college or university, tickets to sporting events should be affordable and the teams should participate in a bona fide playoff, rather than — as is the case with college football– a pre-determined bowl system.

•Sports fans should be able to watch their local teams play, regardless of how fans get their games. There should be no local sports exclusives, especially if public resources went into building the local sports arena.

http://www.politico.com/arena/perm/Bradley_A__Blakeman_695D509C-D702-4384-8366-6EDF5D304C44.html

November 12, 2009   |No Comments Blog

Dave Zirin shows his support for the SFC in the Huffington Post

SFC board member Dave Zirin gives Sports Fans Coalition some love on Huffington Post:

It’s Time for a Sports Fans Coalition

Posted: November 11, 2009 01:41 PM

I have made the decision to help launch a new organization called the Sports Fans Coalition. And I was inspired to do it by none other than Mike Lupica.

With all due respect to Mr. Lupica, the New York Daily News sportswriter motivated me by writing the most wrongheaded statement ever written by any sports journalist in history. He wrote “You are owed nothing in sports, no matter how much you care. You are owed nothing no matter how long you’ve rooted or how much you’ve paid to do it.”

This is so flagrantly wrong. Whether we consider ourselves sports fans or not, the athletic industrial complex owes us plenty. More than anything else, we are owed a say in how the business of sports is run.

We aren’t owed this because we cheer ourselves hoarse. We haven’t earned it because we pass the rooting tradition down to our children like a rare heirloom. We don’t deserve it because it would be a kind and respectful act for sports owners to bend an ear toward our concerns. We are owed it because team owners have had their hands in our pockets for far too long. By calling for and receiving public funds and taxpayer dollars, the owners of professional sports teams have an obligation to hear what we have to say.

$30 billion in public subsidies have gone into stadium funding over the last quarter-century. It has become a substitute for anything resembling an urban policy in the United States. Pro sports owners, aided and abetted by political lackeys of both parties, have taken us for a collective ride. It may have seemed like fun and games in the go-go 90s. But now that the
credit is being crunched, the time for games has ceased.

You might think that in these tough times, stadium deals would be a thing of the past. But even more of these deals are coming down the pike. Let’s be clear: the ride stops now.

The problem is that the organization simply hasn’t existed that can agitate for the voice of fans on Capitol Hill and build a grassroots movement in the streets. Now it does, and that’s the Sports Fans Coalition: a non-profit organization made up of sports fans who want to demand a seat at the table. Its goals could not be more simple:

  • Fair return to the fans for public resources used in sports
  • Fair access to sporting events at the game and in the media.
  • Oppose public subsidies to sports teams. But if subsidies are used:

such funds must be tied to (a) affordable seating throughout the venue and other benefits to the public; and (b) no media “blackout” of sporting events at that arena and no blackouts of local games. Sports fans must be able to view their local sporting events, regardless of what company provides their TV service. If a college or university receives public funds, such funds must be tied to (a) affordable seating throughout sporting venues; and (b) that school participating in a bona fide national championship.

I was asked to sit on the board of this venture and I accepted without a moment’s hesitation. To be clear, I don’t receive one solitary dime for doing it. I am doing it because I speak in cities around the country. Everywhere, I meet fans who love sports but hate what they have become. They love sports but they cannot stand the idea that they are being taken. It’s a very real anger. I am relishing the idea of telling people that they don’t just have to take it. I want to shout it from the rooftops: now there is a vehicle by which we can organize and fight for a fair deal from the world of sports.

Already I know we are making an impact because we are making all the right enemies. Before we even started, the cable companies went on a full-court press to tell media outlets that we were “astro-turf”; a front built on satellite dollars trying to take a chunk out of their profits. It’s a lie that speaks volumes about the fear that they have that sports fans might actually attempt to develop and organize a voice.

We are owed loyalty. We are owed accessibility. We are owed a return on our massive civic investment. And more than anything, we should make it plain to the owner’s box and say that we are owed a little bit of goddamn respect.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dave-zirin/its-time-for-a-sports-fan_b_353218.html

JOIN THE COALITION today to be a part of the solution!

Fantasy Leagues Threatened

November 10, 2009   |2 Comments Uncategorized

Fantasy Leagues Threatened

Who owns sports stats? Most people would say that the public does – that this information belongs to everyone. If some in the sports industry had their way, however, fans could be forced to pay for access to facts about players and games.

So far, federal courts have sided with the fans. The courts have rejected claims by Major League Baseball as well as the NFL Players Association that they have intellectual property rights over sports statistics or other information about players and games. In the courts’ view, the public interest commanded by this data merits constitutional protection.

In other words, courts have said that sports figure so prominently in American public discourse that the First Amendment protects the public’s right to sports information. The Supreme Court decided not to hear one of these cases last year. Around the same time, in an editorial titled Take Me Out© to the Ballgame®, the N.Y. Times slammed the MLB for claiming “fans should pay to talk about the game.”

Nevertheless, just this summer Yahoo! had to sue the NFL Players Association to establish its right to convey sports information to its fantasy sports users. The NFL Players Association had demanded that Yahoo! pay royalties for the privilege of using publicly available information about games and players, and threatened to sue Yahoo! if it did not pay up. Although this case settled on undisclosed terms in July, the NFL Players haven’t given up this claim; they have appealed a court decision holding that the First Amendment trumped their claim of a right of publicity in game- and player-related data.

It is unlikely that sports lawyers will be lurking around the watercooler to sue folks for talking trash about the batting and pitching in the Yankees-Phillies series (not legal advice; your watercooler may vary). But what about fans breaking down the latest game online, and those discussing virtual match-ups at fantasy sports sites? Unfortunately, who owns the virtual watercooler is still up for grabs. If fans want to have a say in that fight, they need to speak up.

Matthew Schruers is senior counsel to the Computer & Communications Industry Association (CCIA) and an adjunct professor at Georgetown University, where he teaches about intellectual property. The opinions expressed here are his own.

November 01, 2009   |No Comments College Football Playoff, Issues

College Football Playoff

If a college or university receives public funds, such funds must be tied to affordable seating throughout sporting venues; and that school participating in a bona fide national championship. It is simply unfair that Universities which play at the highest level of collegiate athletics are subjected to the unfettered cronyism at work in the Bowl Championship Series. Colleges in the clique or BCS conference are given the opportunity to compete for a National Championship. All those on the outside looking in have no recourse. The Sports Fans Coalition is fighting for change to an equitable system which rewards success on the field of play. A college football playoff is the only answer. Join the Coalition in support of creating a fair system to determine a true National Champion in NCAA Football.

http://www.sportsfans.org/agenda/#funding

November 01, 2009   |No Comments Issues, Stadiums

Stadiums

If a sports venue is built with public funds, such funds must be tied to affordable seating throughout the venue and other benefits to the public. It’s not enough for local governments to commit to subsidize mammoth stadiums for billionaires in the name of gentrification. The bottom line is that low-income taxpayers will not only lack the ability to purchase tickets to the new stadium, but they will also lack the purchasing power at the concession stand, the parking lot, and all the plush new businesses encircling the newly constructed building. With tax-free stadiums, billionaire franchise owners often don’t lose a penny on the deal in the first year. The public pays to further enrich the wealthy, and when the going gets tough, the franchise moves to a new city. No longer will we be held hostage by sports franchises to build new stadiums on our own dime. Join the Coalition to create a more organized effort to fight back.

Read more on our Agenda page: http://www.sportsfans.org/agenda/#venue

November 01, 2009   |No Comments End the Sports Blackout Rule, Issues

Where Are My Games?

Sports fans must be able to view their local sporting events, regardless of what company provides their TV service. It is as simple as that. Whether you are being marginalized by a specific cable company in your TV market that will not allow competitors to air the games or your team has not sold enough tickets for the game to be broadcast locally, the Sports Fans Coalition is in your corner seeking to change this. No longer should contract issues between media companies prevent you from watching your team on the court or field. Sports fans now have a place to gripe about these consumer rights issues, and rather than allowing your valid complaints to fall on deaf ears, the SFC is taking your stories, your actual experiences, and your virtual petition signatures to our government demanding retribution. Join the Coalition, and make your voice heard immediately!

Read more on our Agenda page: http://www.sportsfans.org/agenda/#local

Sign our petition to the FCC: http://www.sportsfans.org/petition-the-fcc/

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