And he's still fibbing about the team staying here if we don't pass the tax, despite the fact that no one has ever corroborated his opinion. I guess he thinks no one reads the Gazette, where Clay has come out personally and said the team is not coming if we don't pass the tax.
Opponents of a sales tax to raise $121 million for improvements to the Ford Center and construction of an NBA practice facility pushed the argument Friday that the cost is too high.
Voters will decide Tuesday whether to approve the one-cent sales tax.
At a news conference Friday, Oklahoma City area resident David Glover handed out copies of an e-mail from Oklahoma City special projects manager Tom Anderson informing him that the proposal aimed at luring the NBA's Seattle SuperSonics would cost the average resident $10 per month or $150 per year.
Glover said he would support the relocation of an NBA team to Oklahoma City, but this price is too much to pay.
"If I thought it would be just a penny or just a couple of pennies, I'd be for it," said Glover, who lives in the small suburb of The Village but pays most of his sales tax in the city that surrounds it.
Mayor Mick Cornett has said he doesn't believe breaking down the cost per citizen is an accurate way to approach the issue, since different people and businesses spend different amounts in the city.
"It's real easy to do the math. For people to say the average is X amount, people can do that in their head. They know every time they buy something, it's 1/100th of what they pay," Cornett said earlier this week. "I don't think an average does much good because the percentage that some people spend in Oklahoma City is different."
Glover also challenged the notion that the SuperSonics, owned by a group of Oklahoma City businessmen led by Clay Bennett, would stop seeking relocation to the city if voters reject the proposal at the polls Tuesday.
"You will never hear anybody say, 'If the citizens don't make this change, we won't come.' The reason why is because I believe these people have civic pride, and that these people want this team in Oklahoma City," Glover said. "The only thing is if they don't come, we'll all know what it's really about and that it's about the money."
Former state Rep. Wanda Jo Peltier told reporters at the news conference that she thinks the money could be spent better to fight hunger in the city.
Bookmarks