Description
The article under required readings entitled “Progress, Pain for Vikings Stadium in 2015” describes the construction progress of the U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota as of a point in time. One of the items highlighted in the article is the cost—there were some staggering numbers cited by the author in terms of cost overruns! For example, the author states in one year, the project costs had increased by $65 million for a total cost increase from $1.026 billion to $1.091 billion. Since there are public monies being utilized for approximately half of the cost of the facility, there is an entity overseeing the construction on behalf of the public.
The board of this entity approved budget increases at 10 out of 12 meetings in a 12-month span of time. The remaining cost is being funded by the NFL franchise, the Minnesota Vikings. Even though the Minnesota Vikings have absorbed a large amount of the cost overruns, it is likely possible that state and city taxpayers are concerned that such a large project with a relatively short construction window (31 months) given its size could have been under-budgeted to this degree.
Debate for one side or the other…
Does the Minnesota Sports Facility Authority (and any other jurisdiction’s construction oversight organization) have an ethical obligation to the taxpayers to keep the project on budget even if it means that the brand new publicly funded entertainment facility that would last 15-20 years have to go without or have lesser quality features, or should they strive for world class status with the anticipation of those features attracting larger and better future events to stimulate the local economy regardless of the current costs?
Explanation & Answer
Attached.
Running Head: MINNIAPOLIS STADIUM DEBATE
Minneapolis Stadium Budget Overrun
By Name
Course
professor
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1
MINNIAPOLIS STADIUM DEBATE
As a U.S resident, I have mixed feelings concerning the state of this project. This is
because taxpayers’ money that can be used for different projects and functions such as funding
education, among other public projects, is in question. First, the people signed for the actual
budget of $1.026 billion, which means the extended budget will have to come from somewhere
else (Hsieh, 2018). Starting with the first issue, the Minneapolis Sports Facility Authority,
among other oversight authorities, is mandated to ensure it keeps on check...