Minnesota should set plans for a brand new Vikings stadium on hold until a better way can be figured out by it to pay for it, some state lawmakers say in accordance with Jennifer Brooks of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. Electronic pulltabs were supposed to account the stateas $384 million share of the newest baseball stadium. But in their first year, e-pulltabs pulled in a depressing $1.7 million a well below the $35 million a needed a' forcing the state to scramble for alternative revenue sources, like digital bingo games. In place of scrambling, state Sen. Sean Nienow says, Minnesota must decrease, set the whole arena venture on hold, and find out a secure means of paying for a fresh home for the Vikings. aAre we really planning to create a sports stadium and get money from education, healthcare and maintaining roads?a Nienow said in a record Thursday. aIn whose world is that the good idea?a Nienow and state Rep. Mary Franson, R-Alexandria, are introducing legislation that would delay the purchase of the first ground securities until the the Minnesota Management and Budget office certifies that the state has raised enough money to create its annual payments. The first stadium bonds are set to be bought this summer and the groundbreaking for the new stadium is set for this fall.
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