I have quietly followed the Florida Marlins’ ride this year. It’s been fun and somewhat strange. In Miami, we have major league baseball’s lowest payroll, somewhere around $20-plus million for the entire 25-man squad. This bargain basement group happens to be playing some of the best baseball (except for their fielding) and leading the majors in home runs as a team (which makes up for the errors on the field). I like them; they’re playing the game because they like to play it, not necessarily for the millions they’re making. Surely, that will change. But I’m enjoying the ride so far.
Compare that to the New York Yankees with a team payroll north of $200 million and a lineup with names like Alex Rodriguez, Derek Jeter, Hideki Matsui, Robinson Cano, Mariano Rivera — all-stars at almost every position. Yet both teams have comparable records this season. And don’t be surprised to see the Marlins make it to the offseason while the highly paid Yanks sit home and stew during the playoffs — again.
But let me get to my point…
It’s about the stadium the powers that be in Miami want to build on the old Orange Bowl site. (The old football stadium where Miami’s Super Bowl teams played three decades ago no longer stands. The wrecking ball took to her earlier this year. A large space now sits in the middle of Miami’s Little Havana. See video at the bottom.) Marlins management, including the previous regimes, for years has clamored for a new baseball stadium with retractable roof in the heart of Miami. They claim it will help draw crowds; Miami’s rain and stifling heat the reason they give for their lousy crowds. I agree with the idea of a new stadium. It would be wonderful although I must say that as old and rusty as the Orange Bowl was, I will miss her…
It would be wonderful to visit the new stadium and watch these Marlins take on the Yankees in a modern day version of David and Goliath where a roof can be closed if it happens to rain the night I visit the stadium. That’s all well and good.
The problem? Marlins management wants the public to help pay to build the stadium. That’s right. A team owner whose bank account must hover close to a billion wants us (who can hardly afford $4.50 a gallon of gas while paying very high taxes on our homes and wondering if our child’s school can afford to stay open!) to pay for it. Most of it, anyway. And that’s where my enthusiasm for the Marlins has come a screeching halt.
Show me a good reason why I should pay for this stadium
Which brings me to a group called Jobs With Justice. They do good work and work directly with the community. Now if the city and county, along with a judge trying to rule on the future of the stadium, would listen to these folks, who knows, we might be able to reach some kind of compromise.
I say compromise because I feel we are doomed. One way or another we will be paying for this stadium. It’s in the cards. There is too much money involved and the majority of our elected officials are on board.
So here’s what JWJ proposes: build it, as long as you put the people from the neighborhood where it will be built to work. That’s right, Miami’s Little Havana neighborhood has a high rate of unemployment. Many abled men and women who can work, but can’t find a job, live around the stadium. So, says JWJ, if we’re going to build this monster in the middle of their neighborhood with OUR tax dollars, put that money back into the community: hire the community to build it.
I would rather not finance a stadium for a group of rich men. It looks like we may not have a choice. Like I said, it’s in the tea leaves. So, if this is the case, JWJ’s idea is not a bad one.
Put the community to work with our tax dollars!
Alvaro F. Fernandez
Miami Orange Bowl & Future Marlins Stadium P.1