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

Marysville site selected for NASCAR track

Donna Gordon Blankinship Associated Press

EVERETT, Wash. – Snohomish County and state officials announced Monday that International Speedway Corp. has chosen an 850-acre site about 30 miles north of Seattle as the preferred site for a NASCAR racetrack.

The site – selected over other possibilities in Oregon and Kitsap County – still faces several hurdles before construction begins, including who will pay for the project and whether it will pass environmental reviews.

“This basically says they’re here. This is the site they’ve chosen to pursue,” said Marysville Mayor Dennis Kendall at a news conference also attended by Snohomish County Executive Aaron Reardon and Lt. Gov. Brad Owen.

The property being targeted for the racetrack is currently a mixture of farmland and light industrial, surrounded by housing subdivisions. Nearly all of the acreage is owned privately by a number of people and companies, said Snohomish County spokesman Mark Funk.

Public and private funding will pay for the track, but government officials and International Speedway are still negotiating those details. They plan to release a plan Oct. 6 that outlines finances and other details such as property ownership once the track is built. The plan will be released to the Legislative Committee on Economic Development and International Relations.

Owen, who called the legislative committee meeting, said, “As long as we put together a package,” the track will be built. Reardon said he hopes a funding plan will be approved during the 2005 legislative session.

International Speedway officials could not attend the Monday news conference because of Hurricane Jeanne, Kendall said.

“We think that Marysville is going to be a great spot for a major motor sports facility and we’re excited about working with them to make it a reality,” ISC spokesman David Talley said from company headquarters in Daytona Beach, Fla.

The $140 million Great Northwest Speedway would be built on farmland and would open in 2008. It would seat up to 75,000 spectators for one major racing event a year and up to five minor races. The overall project — including land acquisition, support facilities and permits — could cost as much as $300 million.

Funk said a King County economic development study estimated revenues of $87 million to $127 million for a track in the state. That could vary depending on the track’s location.

Other sites that had been proposed included one in Kitsap County on the west side of Puget Sound and two in western Oregon.

The Snohomish County track proposal has already drawn opposition from Snohomish County Citizens Against a Racetrack, or SCAR, which complained about new traffic congestion.

Co-founder Jack Shouman said the organization also feels local businesses would not benefit from the track and road construction dollars would have to be reallocated from other projects around the state.

“We just don’t want to be trapped in our community on race days,” said Shouman, who says he moved to Marysville to escape traffic congestion in King County.

Supporters have formed Fans United for NASCAR, anticipating the project would create jobs and be good business for the county.