A Vote Could Be the Secret Weapon to Slow Down the Convention Center Hotel Plans

Opponents of a city plan to publicly fund and own a convention center hotel are talking about—but so far not acting on—a last-ditch option to derail the project: Let voters decide for themselves if they want to invest up to half a billion dollars to become hoteliers.

Council members Angela Hunt and Mitchell Rasansky have been staunch critics of the hotel project, most notably voting against the council's decision to put an option on land where the proposed hotel will be built.

"I think with something as big as this," Hunt says, "I'd want to hear from the voters."

Rasansky stopped talking publicly about the hotel when city attorneys told him he had a conflict of interest because he owns stock in Citigroup, one of the six bond underwriters approved by the council for the project. Rasansky can't participate in council discussion or votes regarding the hotel, but he claims Dallas city attorney Tom Perkins isn't sure if the conflict restricts him from speaking in public. He's awaiting a ruling from the attorney general on that point, and in the meantime, he's talking again. When asked if there should be a referendum, he doesn't hesitate. "Absolutely," he says. "Why are they [city staff] not being transparent? There's the damn answer."

Rasansky's conflict meant he couldn't attend the May 6 closed-door meeting of the city council's Economic Development Committee, at which committee members recommended city ownership and public funding for the hotel. He says he was shocked that the decision was made for the city to own the hotel. "Insanity is the only word," Rasansky says. "Absolute insanity."

For a public vote to become reality, there would need to be political backing to support such an endeavor. While both Hunt and Rasansky support bringing the issue to the voters, they say they have no plans to become significantly involved in a potential vote.

As for financing a possible petition drive to put the hotel before voters, the likely candidate would be Crow Holdings, which owns the Hilton Anatole and has been a longtime critic of using public money to fund a hotel. Gina Norris, an executive with Crow Holdings, says the company supports a public vote but has no immediate plans to get involved in a call for one.

Any forces behind a vote would be allowed to collect petition signatures for 60 days. To get the referendum on the November ballot, at least 10 percent of registered Dallas voters must sign the petitions; that's 53,590 valid signatures, according to the Dallas County Elections Department.

Proponents of the hotel project include Mayor Tom Leppert along with the majority of the city council and staff. Council member Sheffie Kadane, a member of the Economic Development Committee, says city staff provided him with sufficient data to prove the city would profit by owning the hotel, but he admits that additional risk is added to the deal now that taxpayers will be liable for any losses.

Kadane maintains he was originally opposed to city ownership of the hotel, but the information provided at the private committee meeting persuaded him to change his mind. He's unable, however, to explain how the city would be able to profit from hotel ownership.

"I'm just not real clear on all of it," Kadane says. "From what they showed us, they proved that by us owning it, we'll come out ahead on it."

Assistant city manager A.C. Gonzalez says the biggest difference between private and public ownership of a hotel is the "cost of money." Because the city can borrow money at interest rates 1.5 to 3 percentage points lower than a developer, he claims, the city will make a profit by owning the hotel as opposed to subsidizing it.

Based on a study performed by HVS Convention, Sports & Entertainment Facilities Consulting, Gonzalez says the city would make a profit as soon as the hotel opens, which is likely to be early 2012, if it owned the hotel. On the other hand, to make a deal work out with a developer, the city would need to subsidize the project annually at a cost of $8 million to $10 million. Gonzalez, co-chair of the city's convention center hotel task force, says that in order for the city to lose the amount equal to that subsidy, the hotel's occupancy rate would have to drop from a projected 68 percent to below 50 percent.

When told about Gonzalez's reasoning, Rasansky simply said, "I didn't just get off the watermelon truck."

Hunt says she isn't convinced that city staff has provided enough data to support public ownership, but she is still "evaluating the facts and arguments to make a sound decision." She claims the HVS study should be scrutinized because of the company's potential conflict in also providing hotel management services along with investment banking for hotel projects. Hunt adds that "rosy projections" like those provided in the HVS study often don't become reality, and she used the city's recent $50 million budget deficit as an example.

"That is a perfect example of how projections—however based in reality, however supported by facts, however supported by history—can be significantly wrong," she says.

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  • Rich 05/20/2008 10:46:00 PM

    The Rasansky "conflict" is a joke. This deal will not move Citi's share price one penny. If Leppert believes it's a conflict than he should pull Citi out of the deal and let Mitchell and the people he represents have their say. It's bad enough that I don't get to vote on this - but my representative doesn't get a vote either?

  • JS 05/20/2008 7:21:00 PM

    Can someone answer this? Rasansky is barred from speaking on the issue due to a conflict of interest in that he owns stock in Citi, an underwriter selected by Dallas for the bond offering. In other words, Rasansky stands to profit if the hotel goes through because Citi will profit. But Rasansky actually is against the hotel project, right? So doesn't that mean he has no conflict because he won't be putting money into his pocket if he gets his way?

  • Ryan 05/15/2008 8:23:00 PM

    Oops. My math was off. It should be 70 additional convention nights rather than 102 (102 nights for 100% occupancy rate). And that would mean we'd have to attract an additional 20 conventions.

  • Ryan 05/15/2008 8:20:00 PM

    So, if the hotel has 1,200 rooms, that would equal 438,000 potential room nights per year. A 68% occupancy rate would equal 297,840 hotel room nights. If we accept the wildly inflated 3.56 average stay per convention attendee, that means 83,662 convention attendees have to stay in the hotel per year to meet the occupancy rate the estimates provide. Since there is a limited number of rooms available (1,200), that would mean that there would need to be an additional 102 convention days added to the Convention Center schedule to meet the estimate. Assuming the average convention length is the same 3.56 days that conventioneers supposedly stay in the city, that would mean we'd have to attract an additional 29 conventions to the city. Unless my math is off, which is always a possibility.

  • Nathan 05/15/2008 3:24:00 AM

    "I'm just not real clear on all of it. From what they showed us, they proved that by us owning it, we'll come out ahead on it." - Sheffie Kadane, just before voting to build a city owned convention center. WTF!?!?!?!? Who are these people?

 

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