Thrive
St. Pete stadium funding source faces early termination
City officials did not address a new Historic Gas Plant District redevelopment proposal at the meeting.

St. Petersburg extended a financing district’s lifespan to help fund a massive redevelopment project anchored by a new Tampa Bay Rays stadium. Some officials would like a mulligan.
A City Council committee agreed Thursday to begin exploring the Intown Community Redevelopment Area’s (CRA) early termination. In June 2024, council members voted 5-3 to extend it a decade, until 2042, and increase its budget from an estimated $232.35 million to $574.85 million.
Councilmember Richie Floyd has led efforts to undo the extension since former Rays owner Stuart Sternberg exited the Historic Gas Plant District’s redevelopment deal in March. He, his colleagues and administrators did not address a new proposal and team ownership group, which is aggressively seeking a new stadium, at Thursday’s meeting.
“Just rolling it back to 2032 is already a compromise, because I have some real moral qualms with it existing anymore – like past today,” Floyd said. “So, I would like to see us move something forward.”
Local governments establish CRAs to revitalize blighted areas by diverting property tax increases within the district to redevelopment and infrastructure projects. The money would otherwise go toward citywide expenses.
The Intown CRA, established in 1982, runs east from Tropicana Field to the St. Pete Pier. Floyd has called it a “large subsidy for downtown” that “locks tons of wealth” into a now-thriving area.
No one spoke in opposition to unraveling the extension Thursday. City Administrator Rob Gerdes said the mayor’s office is “generally comfortable with rolling it back,” although he also suggested ending it in 2034.
“I think this is a very simple conversation at this point,” said Councilmember Brandi Gabbard. “It’s a prioritization of funding that is being held hostage in one area. We are going to need additional funding to meet the needs of residents citywide.
“It made sense at the time for that specific project. I don’t believe it makes sense anymore.”
Mayor Ken Welch is now reviewing a new proposal to reimagine the area around Tropicana Field. Rendering provided.
City officials agreed to contribute $212.5 million to a new Rays stadium. They also planned to complete $130 million in infrastructure upgrades.
Intown CRA coffers will collect an estimated $223.2 million by 2032. That number soars to $515.6 million in 2042.
While previous plans to redevelop the Gas Plant and Trop site have withered, Welch is now reviewing a new $6.8 billion proposal “in detail.” Some version of the generational project “remains a top priority of my administration,” he said Oct. 3.
Ark Ellison Horus expects infrastructure costs to total $239 million, according to the proposal. The development team plans to use tax increment financing (TIF) funding provided by the Intown CRA to help foot the bill.
The Rays will also ask the City of Tampa or St. Petersburg to help pay for a new ballpark surrounded by a massive mixed-use development. Controlling owner Patrick Zalupski made that clear Tuesday.
“I think it’s critical to have a public-private partnership,” Zalupski said. “There’s so many nuances to how a deal could come together. We’re confident that Tampa Bay wants to see us be successful. Everybody wants to deliver a championship team, and so this is going to be critical in doing that.”
Welch, in a prepared statement sent Thursday, said he had a “productive introductory meeting” with Zalupski’s group following Tuesday’s press conference. He anticipates “ongoing conversations about the future of Major League Baseball in St. Petersburg.”
However, officials refrained from discussing the Gas Plant or Rays during the committee meeting, despite both previously leading to the Intown CRA’s extension.
“I was very hesitant to do this,” said Council Chair Copley Gerdes. “More and more, I’m becoming open to it.”
Gerdes and Councilmember Gina Driscoll stressed the importance of reviewing an updated downtown project list with administrators before agreeing to a termination date. Pinellas County commissioners, who previously voted to exit the joint initiative and start spending their share elsewhere in 2032, must also approve another change.
“I do see Council Chair Gerdes’ point that we want the project list to match the anticipated funding, so that it all evens out,” Driscoll said. “And something isn’t left out.”
Councilmember Lisset Hanewicz called it “mind-boggling” to continue the CRA after 2032, “because it’s your money.” She said city officials could decide if downtown property taxes fund specific projects or citywide initiatives.
“From a financing perspective, it is much cleaner to show a transfer from a TIF district to pay debt service than using the core general fund,” replied Assistant City Administrator Tom Greene.
Floyd noted that keeping the extension would, essentially, allow the city to allocate funding for a future project. “But I don’t think we should do that,” he said.
Floyd motioned for administrators to begin discussing the change with their county counterparts “to shorten the length of the interlocal agreement’s existence.” His request passed unanimously.
David Woods
October 10, 2025at5:46 pm
They’ve been discussing, planning, and just plain screwing around with that area since 2004. Nothing has ever been accomplished. They need to just hang it up. Ive come to believe the money for the multiple and repeated studies on the taxpayers dime is nothing more than A GRIFT.
Bill Herrmann
October 9, 2025at5:05 pm
Has anyone determined if the CRA funds can ‘buy’ some of the gas plant and transfer it into a land trust?
Such a move would assure this, and future generations of affordable REAL work force housing. People like teachers and city staff with 10 years of tenure.
The last thing we should be doing is some silly project. Let’s take care of the fundamentals like housing for workers.
John Burgess
October 9, 2025at4:32 pm
A mulligan is a second chance to perform an action, usually after the first chance went wrong through bad luck or a blunder.
This so-called “development” has been a major blunder since its inception. Ironic that the beginning was approved by David Welch and the crowning and most recent blunder is attributed to his son, Ken Welch.
The “leaders” of our city are quick to spend taxpayers’ money in any and every scheme they can concoct.
They increase our taxes, increase our water bills (how many times until the electorate gets rid of these fools?) and rake in more more and more property taxes from new developments and rising property values.
CRA is just another funnel moving money from our pockets to theirs.
They literally have more money than they can spend effectively and go out of their way to find ridiculous and ineffective ways to throw our money at the latest scheme. Just wait, there is another new stadium coming out of taxpayers’ wallets.
Kari Mueller
October 9, 2025at2:32 pm
Tell City Council to say NO to extending the Intown CRA! Let it expire!
Thank you Richie Floyd and Lissett Hanewicz for not voting to extend it.
Gerdes, Gabbard, Montanari, Driscoll and Figgs-Sanders should never have approved extending the CRA on June 14, 2024.
This CRA was established in the 1980’s to revitalize a blighted downtown.
5 of the 8 council members wanted to extend it so it could be used as a slush fund for pet projects.
The previous Rays/Hines deal would have siphoned off 50% of the property taxes going into the CRA to pay for the stadium and infrastructure for the Rays.
For 30 years! Totaling $684 million when interest was included. ($312.5 million for stadium, $130 million for infrastructure and $12 million for lift station plus interest.)
That means 50% of the property taxes for buildings like 400 Central would have been skimmed off the top and given to Rays/Hines.
Imagine all the high rises along Central Ave and Beach Drive having 50% of their taxes diverted for the stadium and for infrastructure for their PRIVATE real estate development!
Now a new owner says they need “land, lots of land”. They said they need 100 acres. They want it to be gifted to them.
And they’ll need us, the taxpayers, to pay for THEIR infrastructure.
Stop the extension of the CRA, close the loophole!
When these taxes are diverted out of the CRA, it leaves a hole that the rest of us have to make up.
JAMES GILLESPIE
October 9, 2025at7:49 pm
take more time for discussion and decision. the welch figure exceeding $6 billion at this point in time makes no sense. strong case for a project with the widest city value and that includes more housing. some council members are too itchy and too quick to spend.
joseph boone
October 10, 2025at4:29 pm
thank you for doing the math. That money should be going into the general fund to pay for the roads pipes and other basic services that the city needs. They never learn.