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Dayton: Use Cigarette, Corporate Taxes For Stadium

ST. PAUL, Minn. (WCCO/AP) -- Gov. Mark Dayton proposed a new backup plan Thursday to shore up the state's lagging share of the new Minnesota Vikings stadium, suggesting lawmakers use money from a tax increase on cigarettes and closing corporate income tax loopholes.

Dayton's revenue commissioner, Myron Frans, unveiled the latest proposal in the House-Senate tax conference committee. It threw the contentious stadium issue back in the lap of lawmakers as they rush to wrap up this year's session by Monday.

"We think this will solve the stadium financing issue," Frans said.

The state's $348 million share of the $975 million downtown Minneapolis stadium was supposed to be fueled by tax revenue from new electronic betting games that last year's Legislature authorized in bars and restaurants. But sales of those games so far have badly trailed initial projections. The latest proposal calls for setting aside an estimated $24.5 million in one-time revenue that would be generated by applying a planned cigarette sales tax increase to existing cigarette inventories before the tax actually goes up — an approach Frans called a "stocking tax."

Dayton is now backing a cigarette tax increase of $1.23 per pack to $2.52, more than he initially proposed. The money from the stocking tax would be diverted to a stadium reserve fund. Smoking will not be allowed at the new Vikings stadium, due to open in time for the 2016 season.

If the cigarette tax increase still isn't enough to cover stadium funding shortfalls, additional backup money would come from beefing up collections of business income that Dayton's administration said some corporations have avoided paying by attributing in-state sales to out-of-state affiliates. That's estimated to raise $26 million for the fiscal year starting July 1, and $20 million a year after that.

If the money isn't needed for the stadium, Frans said, it would simply remain in the state's general fund.

"This is a way to make sure the state has the income to keep its end of the bargain," Frans said. It would replace a previous backup plan proposed by lawmakers cover stadium funding shortfalls with a sales tax on pro sports memorabilia and luxury seats at pro sports venues.

Republicans seized on the fact that the new proposal would seize tax revenue that could be spent on more general state priorities.

"We were promised, those of us who voted against the stadium, that this would not end up coming from the general fund," said Sen. Dave Thompson, R-Lakeville. "This is money that could otherwise go to schools, health and human services and the like."

Rep. Bob Barrett, R-Lindstrom, said it's misguided.

"We went from wanting to tax 10-year-old boys who are buying Joe Mauer baseball cards -- we realize that's not a good approach," he said. "Now we are going to tax 34-year-old single moms who have a problem with smoking."

The House-Senate tax conference committee voted in favor of Dayton's proposal, but left some details to be filled in later, such as the exact size of the cigarette tax increase, which is still an issue in the ongoing budget negotiations.

Earlier this year, Dayton proposed a cigarette tax hike of 94 cents a pack. In now backing a $1.29 per pack hike, he's moving even further from his previous opposition to cigarette tax increases of any kind. When running for governor in 2010, he called cigarette tax hikes "money out of the pockets of working people and poorer people."

(TM and © Copyright 2013 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2013 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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