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Agencies flag Browns’ stadium plans; Browns say analysis contains misinformation

CLEVELAND — Two state agencies are raising questions about whether a $600 million investment in a new Cleveland Browns stadium will be a good deal for Ohio and its taxpayers. In a memo released Monday, the nonpartisan Legislative Service Commission warns that the team’s predictions about traffic and events at a new, domed stadium in […]

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CLEVELAND — Two state agencies are raising questions about whether a $600 million investment in a new Cleveland Browns stadium will be a good deal for Ohio and its taxpayers.

In a memo released Monday, the nonpartisan Legislative Service Commission warns that the team’s predictions about traffic and events at a new, domed stadium in Brook Park might be “overly optimistic.”

In a separate letter, obtained by News 5, the state’s budget director says her office does not support a plan to issue $600 million in bonds for construction.

The documents show that state policy analysts have big concerns about the public’s proposed role in the $2.4 billion stadium project. They’re skeptical about the Browns’ math on everything from construction jobs to spending at the 176-acre planned stadium district, where renderings also show apartments, hotels, offices, restaurants, retail and parking.

Team owner Haslam Sports Group “inappropriately overstates projections of future taxes generated by the project, over-inflating positive impacts,” wrote Kimberly Murnieks, the state’s budget director, in a letter addressed to other public officials last month.

The Browns pushed back late Monday, with a point-by-point response to the budget office’s report. In an emailed statement, the team also challenged the Legislative Service Commission’s analysis, saying it contained inaccuracies and misinformation.

A Browns spokesman said the team has already addressed many of the agencies’ concerns in direct conversations with Gov. Mike DeWine and other officials.

“We question many of the memos’ assertions and have worked with our team of national experts to prepare relevant information and responses,” Peter John-Baptiste, the team’s chief communications officer, wrote in an email.

“We understand and welcome Governor DeWine’s commitment to creating a responsible funding mechanism for sports facilities across Ohio, as he has consistently communicated the positive impact Ohio’s teams and their venues have on the state,” he added. “We look forward to more ongoing, collaborative dialogue with the governor and other state officials to create the best solution to bring our transformative project to the state and Northeast Ohio.”

The General Assembly is considering a proposal to borrow $600 million for the Brook Park stadium. The state would repay that debt, with interest, using tax revenues from the entire mixed-use stadium district.

The total cost to the state could approach $1 billion over 25 years.

Browns reveal more details about Brook Park plans in a pitch to state lawmakers

RELATED: Browns reveal more details about Brook Park plans in a pitch to state lawmakers

The Browns say Ohio will more than recoup its investment in the project. But state policy analysts – and financing experts interviewed by News 5 – say it’s impossible to properly vet those claims.

They want to see the assumptions and math behind the team’s headline numbers.

Finance experts, lawmakers ask Browns to explain their math

RELATED:‘No more pretty pictures’: Finance experts, lawmakers ask Browns to explain their math

“The academic literature on publicly funded sports stadiums is vast, covering many decades, sports, states and municipalities,” staffers at the Legislative Service Commission wrote in their memo. “The overwhelming conclusion from this body of research is that there are little to no tangible impacts of sports teams and facilities on local economic activity. A second conclusion is that the level of government subsidies given for the construction of facilities far exceeds any observed economic benefits when they do exist.”

The state budget director, meanwhile, wrote that Haslam Sports Group’s forecast for construction hiring seems “wildly overblown.”

She added that the state is facing many large capital projects – public buildings and infrastructure – and “does not have the capacity to accommodate these priorities plus $600 million in bonds for a single sports facility.”

‘An incredibly huge decision’ 

The Ohio House included the bond package in its version of the biennial budget bill in early April.

At the time, Rep. Brian Stewart, an Ashville Republican who leads the House finance committee, called it “the most conservative stadium funding proposal in America.”

He said the state has a long history of issuing bonds for major projects, as part of its capital budget bill. Stewart added that the Browns’ plan is “backed up by detailed financial metrics under which the new tax revenue generated by this project will pay the cost of the bonds, with no out-of-pocket expense for our taxpayers.”

On Monday, Stewart said he was not available to talk about the concerns raised by state policy analysts.

One of the memos shows that the state budget office voiced its objections to the stadium financing plan two weeks before the House voted on the budget.

Now the debate over the budget – and stadium funding more broadly – has moved to the Senate, which expects to vote on its version of the mammoth spending bill by mid-June.

After that, the chambers will hash out any differences between their versions. The final budget needs to go to DeWine’s desk for his signature – and any vetoes – by June 30.

The governor favors an alternative plan to double the tax rate on sports-gaming companies’ profits to pay for stadiums and youth sports education.

DeWine proposes using some of the money sports bettors lose in Ohio to help pay for new sports stadiums

RELATED: DeWine proposes using some of the money sports bettors lose in Ohio to help pay for new sports stadiums

Sen. Nickie Antonio, the chamber’s minority leader, recently asked the Legislative Service Commission to weigh in on the Browns’ proposal. The Lakewood Democrat released the agency’s memo Monday.

During an interview, she said the analysis just leaves her with more questions and concerns.

“We’ve been asked to make an incredibly huge decision. … That’s a lot of money to be able to be working off the back of a napkin, which is what this feels like sometimes right now,” she said. “So any time that we can add to the information about this for our decision-making, I think it’s really important.”

Antonio wants clarity on what will happen if state tax revenues from the project fall short of covering the debt payments. The House budget bill requires the Browns to put up $50 million as a sort of security deposit – money Haslam Sports Group would get back if the state doesn’t need to tap it. But Antonio isn’t sure that’s enough.

She’s also worried about the impact a Brook Park stadium could have on Cleveland.

“To cannibalize and gut the city of Cleveland, and take these resources away, I don’t think serves anyone well,” said Antonio, who represents much of the city.

The Browns also want Cuyahoga County to issue $600 million in bonds for the project. But County Executive Chris Ronayne has said that request is far too large – and too risky for the county and taxpayers to take on. He’s been urging the Browns to stay Downtown.

‘Not simply a world-class stadium’

Until this week, the only economic-impact reports about the stadium came from the city of Cleveland and the Browns.

A study commissioned by the city last year said losing the team would be a blow to a fragile Downtown, where fans spend money on transit, hotels, bar tabs and restaurant bills. The report also said an enclosed suburban stadium could siphon events away from Rocket Arena and other Downtown venues.

A Browns move to Brook Park will deal an economic blow to Cleveland, study says

RELATED: A Browns move to Brook Park will deal an economic blow to Cleveland, study says

A consultant said the city would lose $11 million in annual tax collections. But the report did not include how much Cleveland is spending on debt service and other expenses each year for Huntington Bank Field, which is city-owned. The Browns’ stadium lease is set to end in early 2029.

The Browns, meanwhile, say the Brook Park stadium district would be a net gain for Cleveland and the region. In December, the team released headline findings from a report showing the project could bring up to 1.5 million more visitors here each year, luring major concerts that are skipping Ohio and pumping $1.2 billion into the local economy.

Browns say new Brook Park stadium district will add $1.2 billion to the local economy

RELATED: Browns say new Brook Park stadium district will add $1.2 billion to the local economy

The Legislative Service Commission cited both reports in its analysis – but said it wasn’t able to get a full copy of the Browns’ economic-impact study, prepared by a real estate consulting firm called RCLCO. The team has only released an executive summary.

The agency believes the Brook Park project will take jobs and activity away from Cleveland – and could pull sporting events from other Ohio venues, too. In the memo, the researchers noted that Haslam Sports Group, which also owns the Columbus Crew soccer team, recently moved a game from Columbus to Cleveland to capture a much larger crowd flocking to see superstar Lionel Messi.

“The increase in economic activity in Cleveland was therefore created at the cost of revenue that would otherwise have been generated in Columbus,” the memo said.

The researchers also said they didn’t have a clear answer to lawmakers’ questions about whether issuing stadium bonds might run afoul of the Ohio constitution. Ultimately, they wrote, only a court can make that decision.

The Browns say the new stadium would be owned by a New Community Authority, a special governmental entity that has unique powers to develop and finance projects. In a response to the state budget office, the team and its consultants said the deal structure aligns with Ohio law and the state’s borrowing policies.

“Our project is not simply a world-class stadium that would be Ohio’s first dome and the easternmost dome in the United States,” the team wrote. “It is a transformative … sports-anchored, mixed-use development project.”





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Basketball in the Barrio camp empowers El Paso youth

EL PASO, Texas (KFOX14/CBS4) — Basketball in the Barrio, an annual summer camp in El Paso’s historic Segundo Barrio and Chamizal neighborhoods, kicked off its 33rd year today at the Armijo Recreation Center. The camp offers children a unique blend of basketball drills, leadership training, and cultural celebration. Steve Yellen, co-executive director of Basketball in […]

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Basketball in the Barrio, an annual summer camp in El Paso’s historic Segundo Barrio and Chamizal neighborhoods, kicked off its 33rd year today at the Armijo Recreation Center.

The camp offers children a unique blend of basketball drills, leadership training, and cultural celebration.

Steve Yellen, co-executive director of Basketball in the Barrio, emphasized the camp’s mission.

“We want to empower these kids through basketball and teach them about leadership and community,” Yellen said.

The camp continues to be a beacon of empowerment and cultural pride for the youth of El Paso.

Anna Yellen, Steve’s daughter and a volunteer at the camp, expressed her enthusiasm for the program. “It’s amazing to see how much the kids grow and learn each year,” she said.

RECOMMENDED: El Pasoans brace for scorching heat wave with safety tips from experts

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Golfers rally for youth with Type 1 Diabetes at benefit tournament

Pictured: The foursome of (l-r) Adam James, Charlie Marshall, Jeremy Meyer and Jeff Horner won the  Eastern Shore Type 1 Diabetes Support Foundation golf tournament at the Eastern Shore Yacht & Country Club recently. By Bill Sterling Chad Muma, a linebacker for the Jacksonville Jaguars, is proof that a diagnosis of type 1 diabetes does not […]

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Pictured: The foursome of (l-r) Adam James, Charlie Marshall, Jeremy Meyer and Jeff Horner won the  Eastern Shore Type 1 Diabetes Support Foundation golf tournament at the Eastern Shore Yacht & Country Club recently.

By Bill Sterling

Chad Muma, a linebacker for the Jacksonville Jaguars, is proof that a diagnosis of type 1 diabetes does not prevent you from leading an active life and accomplishing your goals.

The first raffle prize selected from a table full of some very nice donated items at a benefit golf tournament Friday at the Eastern Shore Yacht & Country Club was a football signed by Muma.

In all, 52 golfers turned out to raise funds for the Eastern Shore Type 1 Diabetes Support Foundation, based in Ocean City Md. and supporting youth with type 1 diabetes from the Bay Bridge in Annapolis to the Chesapeake Bay-Bridge Tunnel in Kiptopeke.

Matt and Shannon Boggs of Onancock, parents of three, whose 10-year-old daughter Raelyn was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in 2022, staged the tournament with the help of the foundation. Shannon said hearing the news about their daughter “flipped our world.”

Corey and Katie Rimel, foundation board members who were on hand at the tournament helping in various ways, know the feeling of hearing that diagnosis. Their son, Eric, now 25, lives with type 1 diabetes.

“We’ve been in and out of way too many hospitals, said Katie.

“It’s a tough diagnosis for the parents and the child, but it’s manageable, and you can live an active life by paying attention to your body,” said Corey.

Type 1 diabetes, once known as juvenile diabetes or insulin-dependent diabetes, is a chronic condition. in which the pancreas makes little or no insulin. Insulin is a hormone the body uses to allow sugar (glucose) to enter cells to produce energy. Although type 1 diabetes can produce complications and affect major organs in the body, Mary Tyler Moore, one of the better known personalities with type 1 diabetes, lived an active life until she was 80.

The Eastern Shore Type 1 Diabetes Support Foundation holds fundraisers like the golf tournament to send youth with type 1 diabetes to Camp Possibilities in Darlington, Md. Camp Possibilities educates their campers through dedicated support sessions that are informative, encouraging and fun. Raelyn Boggs attended last year and will be returning to camp the last week of July.

Katie Rimel said over the years the foundation has raised $175,000 to fully fund the $875 fee for Eastern Shore youth to attend Camp Possibilities. The foundation also awards scholarships to graduating seniors with type 1 diabetes.

Nassawadox Rehabilitation and Nursing .

Winning the tournament was the foursome of Adam James, Jeff Horner, Jamie Nalls and Charlie Marshall with a 56. In second place with a 56 by virtue of a tiebreaker, was the team of Tyler Ames, Brian McCullough, Ruddy Rose and Ryan Horner. Finishing third with a 59 was Thomas Heath, Lee Robbins, Will Carstens and Nick Lewis.

Ruddy Rose had the longest drive, and Charlie Marshall was closest to the pin with a shot five feet from the hole.

Ruddy Rose, right, won the longest drive competition in a golf tournament to support diabetes type 1 at the Eastern Shore Yacht & Country Club. At left is Matt Boggs, father of 10-year-old Raelyn, who was diagnosed with type 1 diabetes three years ago. Boggs and his wife Shannon have three children and live in Onancock.



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Angels continue youth movement, call up 2B Christian Moore – KNBR

The Los Angeles Angels called up top prospect Christian Moore for the first time, adding the second baseman in advance of a three-game road series against the Baltimore Orioles on Friday. Outfielder Matthew Lugo already was optioned to Triple-A Salt Lake, while right-hander Shaun Anderson was designated for assignment Friday to open a 40-man roster […]

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The Los Angeles Angels called up top prospect Christian Moore for the first time, adding the second baseman in advance of a three-game road series against the Baltimore Orioles on Friday.

Outfielder Matthew Lugo already was optioned to Triple-A Salt Lake, while right-hander Shaun Anderson was designated for assignment Friday to open a 40-man roster spot. Right-hander Sam Bachman replaced Anderson on the active roster.

Moore, 22, was the eighth overall selection in last year’s draft out of Tennessee and was batting a combined .279 with five home runs and 32 RBIs in 54 games at Double- and Triple-A.

The Angels have been aggressive in calling up high college draft picks to the major leagues. Starting shortstop Zach Neto was drafted in the first round in 2022 and made his major league debut in April of 2023. Starting first baseman Nolan Schanuel was a first-round pick in 2023 and made his debut a month later.

Lugo, 24, made his debut May 9 and batted .238 with three home runs and six RBIs in 17 games.

Anderson, 30, had a 7.59 ERA in six relief appearances this season, while Bachman, 25, is up for the first time since 2023 when he went 1-2 with a 3.18 ERA in 11 relief appearances.





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BREC kicks off event geared toward curbing crime in youth, cuts ribbon on park redevelopment

BATON ROUGE – On Friday, BREC kicked off Late Night Hype, a community event geared toward curbing crime in youth, and also cut the ribbon on Howell Community Park’s redevelopment. “These parents and kids need to have a place where they can go and enjoy the coolness of the pool during the summertime, the playground, […]

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BATON ROUGE – On Friday, BREC kicked off Late Night Hype, a community event geared toward curbing crime in youth, and also cut the ribbon on Howell Community Park’s redevelopment.

“These parents and kids need to have a place where they can go and enjoy the coolness of the pool during the summertime, the playground, the tennis courts, all that Howell park offers,” Interim BREC Superintendent Janet Simmons said.

The new site was designed with flood and rain events in mind with a new pond, rain gardens and native plants being just a few of the measures to help with stormwater management. The original community center was ruined by a flood in 2016.

Friday also marked the start of Late Night Hype, a summer event series geared toward youth with games, food and rides. Simmons said more children and teens will want to come to Howell Park which she said would keep them out of trouble and may help reduce crime.

“One of the biggest problems with kids, no matter the socioeconomic class you’re in, is idle time,” she said.

Families said they are grateful for the event.

“It helps a lot, it helps keep kids out of the streets. You know? Keep them around kids they age instead of other people,” event goer Elijah Hughes said.

The next Late Night Hype is scheduled for June 20.



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Kids enjoy newly renovated court during Sun Academy basketball clinic – NBC Connecticut

Kids enjoy newly renovated court during Sun Academy basketball clinic – NBC Connecticut Skip to content Close Menu Contact Us Link 0

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Kids enjoy newly renovated court during Sun Academy basketball clinic – NBC Connecticut



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Registration Underway for YMCA Summer Soccer Program

CLARION, Pa. – The Clarion County YMCA is gearing up for a new season of Summer Soccer for youth. Kids from Clarion County and beyond are invited to join the program to build a solid foundation for team sports and learn soccer skills. YMCA Summer Soccer is a participation-based program for boys and girls in […]

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CLARION, Pa. – The Clarion County YMCA is gearing up for a new season of Summer Soccer for youth. Kids from Clarion County and beyond are invited to join the program to build a solid foundation for team sports and learn soccer skills.

YMCA Summer Soccer is a participation-based program for boys and girls in pre-kindergarten through fifth grade (for the 2025-2026 school year)!

The YMCA program focuses on learning the fundamentals of soccer while fostering teamwork and sportsmanship. Volunteer coaches lead practices, and games are held every Saturday at the YMCA Sports Field on Mayfield Road.

The YMCA has revamped the program for pre-kindergarten and kindergarten, ages 4 to 6,  with a YMCA staff-led clinic-style program! This new structure is designed to improve their skills and knowledge of the game through drills, objective-based games, and scrimmages.

The program is led by Clarion County YMCA Associate Director, Max Krepps.  Krepps has a background in Youth Sports, having served as the Youth Director at the Oil City YMCA for nine years.

Pre-K & K Division (Ages 4-6)

  • Meet on Mondays from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. starting June 23rd

1st & 2nd Grade Division

  • Practices during the week to be determined by the coaches
  • Games at 9:00 a.m. on Saturdays, Starting July 12th

3rd, 4th & 5th Grade Division

  • Practices during the week to be determined by the coaches
  • Games at 10:30 a.m. on Saturdays, starting July 12th

Register for YMCA Summer Soccer by June 19th at 5:00 p.m. to guarantee a team t-shirt! Teams will be created on June 20th, and parents will receive an email with team information, practice times, and schedules.

Registration is available ONLINE or by calling 814-764-3400.

Parents can also stop by the YMCA, located at 499 Mayfield Road in Clarion, to enroll their children.





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