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MTA: Stadium estimate
flight of fancy
BY MICHAEL SAUL
DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU
MTA Chairman Peter Kalikow criticized the Jets' financial assessment of the proposed site for the West Side stadium yesterday, saying he had issues with the team's creative math.
At issue is the Jets' insistence that the cost of constructing a platform atop the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's West Side yards should be deducted from the team's assessment of the site.
The Jets' assessment pegged the value of the air rights at $350 million, but then deducted $315 million for the cost of the platform - leaving the bottom-line figure at $35 million.
"The Jets are getting money from the city and the state to do the platform; therefore, I don't believe the MTA should have to give them a credit for it," Kalikow testified at a state Assembly hearing in lower Manhattan.
"It literally has been the point, the nut that we cannot crack. It has always been the problem in the negotiations," he said.
The MTA's appraisal identified the fair market value of the portion of the site that the Jets want to develop at roughly $300 million.
At yesterday's hearing, Richard Brodsky (D-Westchester), a potential attorney general candidate, grilled Kalikow about whether it was appropriate for the MTA to allow former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell to settle the impasse.
As the Daily News first reported this week, Kalikow and Jets President Jay Cross have agreed to let Mitchell arbitrate the dispute. For Mitchell to get the assignment, the MTA board must approve the plan.
Brodsky recommended that the site be condemned and that the fair market value be determined by the courts. State and MTA officials questioned yesterday whether that idea was legal.
Marissa Shorenstein, a spokeswoman for the Jets, defended the team's insistence that the Jets receive a credit for the platform.
"Like the MTA, the New York Jets are confident that through the process of arbitration led by Sen. George Mitchell we will establish the fair market value to be paid to the MTA," she said.
flight of fancy
BY MICHAEL SAUL
DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU
MTA Chairman Peter Kalikow criticized the Jets' financial assessment of the proposed site for the West Side stadium yesterday, saying he had issues with the team's creative math.
At issue is the Jets' insistence that the cost of constructing a platform atop the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's West Side yards should be deducted from the team's assessment of the site.
The Jets' assessment pegged the value of the air rights at $350 million, but then deducted $315 million for the cost of the platform - leaving the bottom-line figure at $35 million.
"The Jets are getting money from the city and the state to do the platform; therefore, I don't believe the MTA should have to give them a credit for it," Kalikow testified at a state Assembly hearing in lower Manhattan.
"It literally has been the point, the nut that we cannot crack. It has always been the problem in the negotiations," he said.
The MTA's appraisal identified the fair market value of the portion of the site that the Jets want to develop at roughly $300 million.
At yesterday's hearing, Richard Brodsky (D-Westchester), a potential attorney general candidate, grilled Kalikow about whether it was appropriate for the MTA to allow former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell to settle the impasse.
As the Daily News first reported this week, Kalikow and Jets President Jay Cross have agreed to let Mitchell arbitrate the dispute. For Mitchell to get the assignment, the MTA board must approve the plan.
Brodsky recommended that the site be condemned and that the fair market value be determined by the courts. State and MTA officials questioned yesterday whether that idea was legal.
Marissa Shorenstein, a spokeswoman for the Jets, defended the team's insistence that the Jets receive a credit for the platform.
"Like the MTA, the New York Jets are confident that through the process of arbitration led by Sen. George Mitchell we will establish the fair market value to be paid to the MTA," she said.