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Council referral: proposed deal with Wisconsin Center District on lease payments and annual pilot payments sent to finance committee

3627280 · May 21, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

A proposed revision to four airspace leases and a new guaranteed payment schedule from the Wisconsin Center District was referred for further review after aldermen debated projected revenue, community benefits and leverage in negotiations.

The Milwaukee Public Works Committee referred to the Finance and Personnel Committee a proposed amendment to four airspace leases with the Wisconsin Center District and a related deal that would replace the existing pilot-payment arrangement with a guaranteed annual payment that begins at $500,000 and grows by 2.5% annually.

Why it matters: the proposed deal would change how the city receives revenue tied to downtown convention-center operations and the district's airspace leases (skywalks and overhangs). Committee members and administration officials said the new structure would provide predictable payments after several years of the previous pilot agreement producing no payments to the city.

What happened

The committee discussed an administration-negotiated package that would remove complex pilot-payment language that the city and outside auditors had described as prone to producing zero payments in many years. Under the proposed arrangement, the administration said the city would receive an annual guaranteed payment beginning at $500,000 and escalating 2.5% per year; administration officials presented a projected guaranteed total over the 35-year term (27.5 million dollars guaranteed in the administrations analysis) and said the final-year annual payment would rise into the low seven figures.

Why the council referred the file

Alderman Baumann criticized elements of the deal and the effective net payment after the airspace-lease concessions. Baumann said the city was being asked to waive airspace lease payments that have historically produced small but certain revenue in exchange for the new pilot structure. He argued the city needed broader committee scrutiny of the financial tradeoffs and the district's overall revenue position before approving the change. On the floor, Baumann said, in part, that the Wisconsin Center Districtwas "projecting a net operating income for 2025 of $4,747,000" and questioned whether the city was getting sufficient value for an arrangement that starts at $500,000 annually.

Preston Cole, the director of administration, and Jim Bull, the city's lead negotiator from the Office of Innovation, presented the administration view that the existing pilot language had produced no…

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