Blazers Fans Have A New Reason To Worry About Portlands Future

The fate of the Trail Blazers in Portland hangs in the balance as arena renovation talks face setbacks, with NBA Commissioner Adam Silver urging swift resolution.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver says the Moda Center renovation talks are slipping off course, and he didn’t hide his frustration Tuesday in Las Vegas.

Speaking after the NBA Board of Governors meeting, Silver said the Trail Blazers and local officials still have “several open issues that still need to be resolved.” He also made clear he expected more movement by now on the agreement discussed during his March visit to Portland.

“I spent time with Tom and his partners here in Las Vegas and what we are most focused on right now in the league office is the deal that we discussed when we were in Portland in March,” Silver said. “I was hoping more progress would have been made by now on that agreement. And it seems to have gone off track in various ways.”

The stalled negotiations center on roughly $600 million in public funding for a renovation of the aging arena, which opened in 1995. Tom Dundon and the Blazers’ new ownership group are trying to line up money from the city, state and Multnomah County to help pay for the project.

So far, the state legislature has approved $365 million in bonds. Portland Mayor Keith Wilson has pledged $120 million, though that still needs approval from the Portland City Council, which has 12 members. Multnomah County is also considering a commitment of more than $100 million.

But the path forward is anything but clean. City and county budgets are already under pressure, and some council members have questioned whether it makes sense to put that much tax money into the project. That concern has only grown after Dundon publicly said taxpayers will have to cover the full renovation bill.

At the same time, the Blazers and local leaders are trying to work out a new 20-year lease that would keep the franchise in Portland. The current lease runs through 2030, and the state’s $365 million share is tied to both the funding packages from the city and county and a successful long-term lease agreement.

Silver’s March trip to Portland came about two weeks before Dundon’s group officially took over the team. He attended a Blazers game with Oregon Sen.

Ron Wyden, a longtime friend, and met with several elected officials, including Mayor Keith Wilson, Oregon Senate President Rob Wagner, Secretary of State Tobias Read, Rep. Maxine Dexter and Multnomah County Chair Jessica Vega Pederson.

At the time, the message from that group was upbeat. They believed the local pieces were aligned and that a deal was moving ahead. Four months later, Silver’s tone suggested the opposite.

“We are working with both sides to ensure that the Trail Blazers can have a long-term future in Portland,” Silver said. “But there are several open issues that still need to be resolved.”

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