logo
MN Legislature: Xcel Energy Center shut out of bond funding for renovations

MN Legislature: Xcel Energy Center shut out of bond funding for renovations

Yahoo11-06-2025
For the second year in a row, the Xcel Energy Center came out of the legislative session with nothing — a frustrating shut-out for both the Minnesota Wild and the St. Paul mayor's office.
Since at least the fall of 2023, St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter and Minnesota Wild owner Craig Leipold have discussed a sweeping remodel of the downtown Xcel Energy Center, the popular home of professional hockey in Minnesota, which also doubles as a celebrated concert hall.
Efforts to secure $2 million in planning and pre-design funds from state lawmakers were unsuccessful last year, and a much larger ask this March — about $395 million in state appropriations bonds — drew skepticism from key lawmakers, including state Rep. Maria Isa Perez-Vega, who represents the district.
Some lawmakers called the process unwieldly from start to finish, and questioned why the city requested the money in 2023, when a nearly $18 billion state budget surplus loomed large. The surplus is projected to dwindle to a shortfall by 2028-2029. The Xcel Energy Center remodel was the city's priority legislative request, topping an expansive list of proposals that was not approved by the St. Paul City Council until March 26, or more than halfway through the legislative session.
Even some supporters called the request large, late and messy.
'All of the above,' said state Sen. Sandy Pappas, DFL-St. Paul, who chairs the Senate Capital Investment Committee, on Wednesday. 'We had a (projected budget) deficit this year. We just don't have a Legislature right now that is very supportive of sports arenas.'
Pappas said she was willing to carry a bill that would extend the city's existing half-cent sales tax — which currently funds St. Paul's Neighborhood STAR and Cultural STAR grant programs, as well as basic maintenance at the X — to pay for some of the proposed arena improvements. To her knowledge, the proposal never found a House sponsor. Perez-Vega, a logical partner, was not on board.
'Their government relations, Craig Leipold, nor Melvin Carter, they never came to me about their sales tax incentive,' said Perez-Vega on Wednesday. 'The first I heard of that was while it was in conference committee through the Senate file that Pappas was carrying. … It was just a little too sloppy. There was no direct communication of how all this would work.'
Perez-Vega said Leipold later approached her apologetically, saying he was unaware that she had not been roped into the process. Still, she hopes to see the Wild more present and active in the communities she represents. 'Why don't they bring the Wild into some of these spaces where the youth are, particularly our communities of color?' she said. 'I see the Saints, I see the Twins, I see the Minnesota United. I want these ties.'
Meanwhile, competition for bond funds came from water and transportation infrastructure projects, including $16 million to the Metropolitan Council for an inflow and infiltration public infrastructure grant program, and $12 million to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, half of which will support statewide grants aimed at addressing drinking water contamination.
'We had a small, $700 million bonding bill we didn't even know if we were going to get passed. And the governor had big asks,' Pappas said. 'He wanted a new Bureau of Criminal Apprehension building in Mankato. He wanted a new building for State Patrol. … He wanted 45% of the bonding bill to be asset preservation for the state buildings and higher ed.'
When Carter and Leipold presented their initial funding ask for the X to the House Capital Investment Committee on March 20, it was little more than a concept plan, as they had yet to secure a bill sponsor. Perez-Vega, who had carried the bill for $2 million in planning and design funds a year earlier, objected at the time to being surprised with such a large request in the 'front yard of my community.'
'If this is the number one priority for the city that I love … I'd like to see more effort to deliver this information to my office,' Perez-Vega said at the time, after listing a long line of competing St. Paul priorities, from homelessness to climate concerns, where tax dollars could be spent.
In early May, Carter and Leipold presented a new plan to lawmakers. The $769 million remodel of the Xcel Center would be pared down to a $488 million upgrade, freezing proposed improvements to the adjoining RiverCentre convention center complex and the Roy Wilkins Auditorium until an unspecified later date.
The funding request to lawmakers dropped from nearly $400 million in state bond funds to $50 million, with the team promising $238 million and any cost overruns. The city and potential partners, such as Ramsey County, would be on the hook for $200 million, though county officials at the time seemed non-committal.
Leipold said at the time the goal was to create a 'modern, best-in-class' facility that keeps up with changing tastes of sports fans, with low-cost, lounge-style seating areas and other fresh amenities. Even in the plan's trimmer version, the state's contribution would have helped expand the north wall along Fifth Street to improve the northeast entrance security area, increase disability access, update restroom plumbing and reduce pedestrian congestion.
Calling the fate of downtown and the X closely linked, Carter wanted to see public-facing improvements that would better connect the arena to Seventh Street, Rice Park and the Landmark Center, creating a continuous entertainment district. Under the title 'Project Wow,' the Wild attempted to draw the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame from Eveleth, Minn. to downtown St. Paul, an effort that drew mixed reaction from lawmakers.
The Xcel Energy Center, which opened in 2000, welcomed a million visitors to Wild and Frost hockey games, concerts, performances and other gatherings in the first three months of this year alone. The arena complex draws more than 2.1 million visitors and $383 million in spending annually, according to the city.
Pappas said she had been able to convince the city to stick to asking for appropriations bonds, which lawmakers consider and fund separately from general obligation bonds. In 2012, Gov. Mark Dayton linked funding for construction of U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, the home of the Minnesota Vikings, to electronic pull-tabs.
'The best path forward for the Xcel is appropriations bonds, with some kind of new funding source to pay off the debt,' Pappas said Wednesday. 'I don't know what that would be.'
'It would have been easier to consider this request in 2023, because we had that big surplus, and we had one-time money,' she added. 'We have a lot of sports arenas that could be coming to the state for money, and I just don't think legislators want to go there.'
Concert review: Maynard James Keenan and pals celebrate his 61st birthday at the X
Frost championship celebration livens up Xcel Energy Center
Evanescence will headline the 93X Family Reunion concert at Xcel Energy Center
Rising pop star Benson Boone to kick off his first arena tour in St. Paul
St. Paul, MN Wild trim Xcel Center's state request from $400M to $50M
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'I Want to Be Remembered for More Than Numbers'—Perez's vision for Aggie softball
'I Want to Be Remembered for More Than Numbers'—Perez's vision for Aggie softball

USA Today

time4 hours ago

  • USA Today

'I Want to Be Remembered for More Than Numbers'—Perez's vision for Aggie softball

Texas A&M All-American Mya Perez has developed into one of the most complete hitters in the SEC, becoming a national household name in the softball ranks. From clutch at-bats to quiet leadership, Perez powered through a defining season. One that delivered accolades, exposed heartbreak, and cemented her role as a standard-bearer for the program's future. To hear it in her own words, we sat down with Mya Perez to talk about her record-breaking run, the pressure behind the plate, and what comes next as she leaves her mark on Aggie softball. As the saying goes, records are meant to be broken, and Perez did just that, surpassing the four-decade-old RBI record, ending the season with 73. This was a significant jump in production for her, and she discussed how her approach had evolved from her freshman year of trying to prove herself to becoming a consistent hitter that her team and coaches could rely on. "I feel like my coaches just worked on me to stay consistent...... Swing, instead of trying to kill it all the time, it was more just, I was trying to get a base hit every at bat. I wasn't trying to hit a home run or anything or do anything extra. Just get my job done, be consistent, and win." It wasn't always easy, and after being used to success, trying to work her way into an SEC lineup full of upperclassmen came with some pressure 'I was pressing because I wanted to do good—I just wanted to find my place.' But she didn't go it alone. Veteran players like Trinity Cannon, Jazz Hill, and Rylan Wiggins helped ground her with encouragement and perspective. 'They helped me find who I am as a player and reminded me never to give up.' Early in the 2025 Aggie softball season, they appeared to have all the tools to be a contender, and they were playing with a level of confidence that turned heads. Mya knew immediately they were in for a special season from the beginning. "I feel like opening weekend was a big weekend for us. You know, we've got to show who we are. And our team was like so close. We were all sisters and family. So, it just made playing like so much fun. Our hitting was on, our pitching was on, our defense was on, everything couldn't be better." The Aggies' early playoff exit hit harder than most imagined. Expectations were sky-high. The talent was undeniable. Yet, postseason heartbreak reshaped the narrative, and coach Ford knows they will hit the drawing board with the same goal of making it back to the postseason. "I feel like it was never really processed, you know, we all know that we're going to come back and work harder and get to the World Series.... I just think our team is definitely going to put in the work and put in 110% just so we can get there.""I think we're all pretty upset about what happened. But we don't even need to hear a message to know that we just got to work. She's (Coach Ford) ready for next season. We're all ready. We're just ready to move on from that game last season." With the 2025 season in the books and the off-season in full swing, Mya is back in the lab focusing on where she can improve, not just on the field but in the locker room. "Fielding at first and maybe just, uh, continuing to be more consistent. So I'm just going to keep working on those two things. Also want to work on outside of, like physical ability is being a leader, and being somebody that the freshmen look up to and the underclassmen." Mya Perez understands that early struggles can shake a player's confidence. Having walked through that uncertainty herself, she's now using her platform to uplift the next wave of Aggies. Her message to younger teammates is rooted in hard-earned wisdom. "Just because you failed doesn't mean you're done yet. Obviously you gotta trust the process and keep working, keep your head down and just push, you know. Always have a goal and keep reaching it. Just remember like, this is a game of failure, it's gonna happen. So just keep working and don't give up on yourself and trust the process." For Perez, legacy isn't just about numbers. It's about impact. She's grateful for the milestones and the records she's chasing, but she's more invested in the impression she leaves on teammates, the culture she helps shape, and the standard she sets for what it means to wear Maroon & White with pride. "I want to be remembered as someone who's positive. I took that role on a little bit last year just to be positive. I want to be somebody that they could always talk to, somebody who's always smiling. I feel like that's always big for me. I'm always smiling. There's never a time where I'm not." As Mya Perez gears up for another chapter in Aggieland, she's not just chasing another record; she's setting a tone. Her story is a blueprint for grit, growth, and quiet leadership. Whether it's a clutch RBI or a dugout smile, Perez leads with purpose. And as younger Aggies lace up and look her way, they won't just see a star, they'll see someone who showed up in every moment, ready to lift the program to new heights. Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes, and opinions. Follow Jarrett Johnson on X: @whosnextsports1.

Xander Zayas outboxes Jorge Garcia to become boxing's youngest active world champion
Xander Zayas outboxes Jorge Garcia to become boxing's youngest active world champion

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Xander Zayas outboxes Jorge Garcia to become boxing's youngest active world champion

Xander Zayas's coronation is complete. The 22-year-old who has long been put forth as Puerto Rico's next boxing star became the sport's youngest active world champion on Saturday night, defeating Mexico's Jorge Garcia Perez by a unanimous decision to claim the vacant WBO junior middleweight title. The stakes couldn't have been clearer for Zayas, a prodigy who turned professional at 17 and has since made a measured ascent through the ranks. With the victory before a rollicking crowd of several thousand at the Theater at Madison Square Garden, Zayas made good on years of promise while penning another chapter into the storied Puerto Rico–Mexico rivalry. The bout was not the formality that some had envisioned. The wiry Garcia, an awkward and unpredictable foe, disrupted Zayas's rhythm early with lunging attacks and roughhouse tactics. But the younger man's superior timing, footwork and hand speed gradually took over. Zayas began beating Garcia to the punch with sharp counters and crisp combinations, breaking him down to the body and head while staying in control against the erratic threat in front of him. There were few moments of real jeopardy, but Garcia made him work for every round. He buzzed Zayas with a flush left hook in the third and rallied late with a flurry in the 10th, but each time Zayas responded with composure. In the end, the ringside judges scored it 119-109, 118-110 and 116-112 in his favor. (The Guardian had it 117-111.) 'That's what it's all about: growth,' an elated Zayas said afterward. 'You guys have seen me since I was 16 years old. You've seen the elevation in my game. Today wasn't the exception. He came to fight. We knew he was coming to fight. We needed to keep him at distance and that's what we did. We frustrated him.' Garcia (33-5, 26 KOs), who earned his shot with an upset of Charles Conwell by 12-round split decision in April, proved durable and determined but lacked the tools to solve Zayas's blend of poise, precision and ringcraft. He landed 130 of 603 punches (21.6%), according to Compubox's punch statistics, compared to 199 of 522 for his opponent (38.1%). For Zayas (22-0, 14 KOs), the win completed a journey that began more than 15 years ago in a San Juan boxing gym, where his mother brought him to learn how to defend himself from bullies. Within months, he was a local sensation. At 10, he'd already declared his professional ambitions. That path accelerated after his family moved to Sunrise, Florida, where he came under the tutelage of trainer Javiel Centeno, a mentee of the great Angelo Dundee. 'My mom is my hero,' Zayas said. 'She made it happen. All this is because of her. She never quit on me. She always told me I was going to be a world champion and she made everything happen, everything possible. We moved out of Puerto Rico to chase that dream and it's finally here at 22.' Zayas grew up studying the Puerto Rican fistic icons – Tito Trinidad, Macho Camacho, Wilfredo Benitez – and idolized Miguel Cotto, whose fights became family rituals. That legacy was always his north star. On Saturday, it came full circle: in the same city where Cotto had his greatest nights, against a Mexican flag-bearer, Zayas became Puerto Rico's next great hope. The belt he won Saturday may be just the beginning. At 22, Zayas has time, talent and a devoted fanbase on his side. The 154lb division is stacked with challenges and unification opportunities, the kind of fights that will reveal how high he can climb. 'Anybody in the division can get it now,' Zayas said. 'There's no running. I'm a world champion, and I have what they want.' Zayas was long seen by many as a polished, likable prospect, but questions remain as the first chapter of his career comes to a close. Does he have the power to hurt the division's elite? Is he pound-for-pound material or a well-managed belt-holder who might fall short at the highest level? Saturday wasn't the night for those answers. Instead it was the night a 22-year-old from San Juan by way of Sunrise fulfilled a lifelong dream and made his first mark on Puerto Rican boxing's ocean-deep lore. 'That's my new baby,' Zayas said, giving his bejeweled trophy a gentle squeeze early Sunday morning. 'I'm sleeping with it tonight. Might sleep with it the whole week. It feels amazing. I worked hard for this. Almost 20 years as a boxer, six as a professional. The hard work finally paid off. I told everybody I was made for this. This was my moment. And we made it happen.'

🐯​ Tigres stun the Liga MX champions
🐯​ Tigres stun the Liga MX champions

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Yahoo

🐯​ Tigres stun the Liga MX champions

We had a goal fest at the Nemesio Diez. Tigres achieved a great victory against the midst of a stormy night in Toluca, the felines dented the champion's crown. The Diablos started out winning the match, but a series of mistakes buried them in the game. Mohamed tried to turn things around by sending Vega, Marcel, and Gallardo onto the field, but they fell just one goal short of completing the comeback. A great match that didn't feel like it belonged to matchday 3. This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here. 📸 Rodrigo Oropeza - 2025 Getty Images

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store