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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Sonics arena won’t see vote

Jennifer Byrd Associated Press

OLYMPIA – The Seattle SuperSonics say a decision by the Washington state Legislature not to vote on a measure to finance the majority of a new $500 million arena has all but doomed team efforts to keep the Sonics in the state beyond next season.

“Clearly at this time the Sonics and (WNBA) Storm have little hope of remaining in the Puget Sound region,” Oklahoma City-based Sonics majority owner Clay Bennett said in a statement issued soon after the Monday night decision.

Seattle has been the NBA Sonics’ only home for 40 seasons.

At a meeting involving Gov. Chris Gregoire and House and Senate leaders, lawmakers came to the conclusion that there simply wasn’t enough time to decide the issue before the session adjourns on April 22. But they said the issue was not dead.

“We know we’re not going to take a vote this session because we’re really running out of time,” said Sen. Margarita Prentice, D-Renton, the arena’s strongest champion. “There’s a number of issues we feel we should resolve.”

The arena plan ran out of time largely because of two factors. First, Bennett did not take control of the team until Nov. 1, 2006, when the NBA finally approved his $350 million summer purchase from Starbucks Corp. Chairman Howard Schultz. Then complications in determining the most viable arena site delayed the plan from reaching the Legislature until Feb. 13 – five weeks after Bennett’s target date, the current session’s Jan. 8 opening gavel.

Sonics spokesman Jim Kneeland said the team has committed to work with the Legislature until Nov. 1 on plans for an arena, but that “this is a very serious blow to try to keep the team here.”

The team is looking to replace KeyArena in Seattle, where the Sonics hold what the NBA calls the league’s worst lease. The purchase agreement that Bennett and his Oklahoma-based co-owners have stipulates that if Bennett doesn’t have a new arena deal in place by Oct. 31, he is contractually free to move the teams. But the Sonics did not file a franchise relocation request with the NBA by the March 1 deadline, meaning they are obligated for at least one more season in Seattle.

Gregoire could call a special session to bring lawmakers back to Olympia after April 22. That appears to be the only way the Sonics could get legislative approval to send their arena plan to King County by Nov. 1. But Monday, lawmakers and a spokeswoman for Gregoire’s office said there’s been no discussion of a possible special session.

The next legislative session does not convene until January 2008.

“By its inaction, the Legislature has delivered the message that they are indifferent to the notion of the Sonics and the Storm leaving the market,” Bennett said.

Lawmakers sounded more optimistic, promising to look at a less Sonics-centric plan for a large-scale arena that they say could be an asset to the entire state.

Monday’s caucus came after Gregoire convened a Saturday meeting to gauge support among Republicans and Democrats in the House and Senate.

Last Friday, Prentice’s committee, the Senate Ways and Means Committee, approved a $278 million package of local taxes to help build the new events center in Prentice’s hometown of Renton, south of Seattle. Bennett has said the proposed facility would hold at least 18,500 fans and could accommodate national political conventions and other sports such as hockey.

But the plan has run into stiff opposition in the state House, where discussions among House Democrats have been lukewarm, and where the powerful speaker, Rep. Frank Chopp, of Seattle, had all but pronounced the plan dead.