A new survey shows overwhelming support for the Tampa Bay Rays stadium deal, with limited opposition.
The poll, conducted by SEA Polling among 400 likely St. Pete voters, found that 57% of respondents either strongly or somewhat support the deal, while only 36% strongly or somewhat oppose the deal. Friends of Gina Driscoll, the political committee supporting City Council member Gina Driscoll, commissioned the survey.
The overall poll asked several questions, including about residents' top issues facing the city, their preferences in local municipal elections and whether they thought the city was heading in the right direction.
But the Rays stadium question jumps out because it stands in contrast to some previous polls pushed by opponents to the deal who are pushing city leaders to work with the Rays and developer Hines to establish better terms for the city and its taxpayers.
Those polls, as we have reported before, were flawed.
One survey, taken by the League of Women Voters, found that nearly 69% of respondents strongly agree that "the city and county should negotiate a better deal than the current term sheet that costs taxpayers $1.9 billion." Another nearly 11% agreed.
But it offered a leading question and the poll itself was unscientific. It was sent to residents via SurveyMonkey, which does not have safeguards in place to ensure responses are coming from the intended recipients. Further, it was sent to more than 30,000 people, with fewer than 800 answering.
Another survey, taken last month, could easily be summed up as a push poll. As I wrote then, the poll was a classic example of toeing the line between legitimate survey and loathed push poll. In the only part of the survey that passes a salt shaker test, respondents were first asked how familiar they are with the redevelopment proposal that includes "building new apartments, condominiums and offices … and the construction of a new baseball stadium for the Tampa Bay Rays" before being asked whether they support or oppose the plan.
Under that question, 51% of respondents indicated they supported the plan, with only 36% in opposition. That means that even with the 13% of respondents who indicated they were undecided, the opposition would still be in the minority.
But that's when it got suspect. It went on to provide respondents with several additional "details" about the proposal that presented only the opposition's talking points. It didn't offer any points in support of the project, an addition that would have given the poll some credibility. As a result, and in a surprise to exactly no one, the sentiment in the poll changed.
What this latest poll also accomplishes though, is adding at least some level of corroboration to a previous survey obtained by Florida Politics, which found that the majority of voters in St. Peter want the Rays stadium deal and would vote against officials who reject it.
That poll found 65% of respondents either strongly or somewhat favor the deal, while 24% were in opposition. Meanwhile, 65% of respondents — the same number who support the deal according to that survey, said if an official were to vote against the proposal, they would be less likely to vote for them in subsequent elections.
The St. Pete City Council is expected to vote on the plan July 18.
They'll likely be bombarded, as they have been for months, with naysayers bent on killing this deal. And those naysayers will be armed with shady poll results to try to make their case.
The group will also likely point to a Tampa Bay Times op-ed masquerading as news under the headline, "One thing St. Petersburg Democrats, GOP agree on: No to Rays stadium deal."
The article was based on a random sampling of members of each major political party, some of them on the fringes, including a straw poll at a St. Petersburg Republican Club town hall in which 26 people said they opposed the deal. That was only 10 more than said they supported it, and there's no way to know how many of the 26 opposed were actually Republicans, since it was open to the public. To be clear, there are nearly 237,000 Republican voters in Pinellas County, so those 26 represent just 0.0001% of the GOP electorate.
The Democratic side of opposition was even more laughable. The Times article was based on a meeting last October in which 15 people showed up. The small group agreed on a resolution opposing the project. It's worth noting, the resolution wasn't even sanctioned by the party. The Pinellas Democratic Party's bylaws directly prohibit anyone but its chair from speaking on behalf of the local party, including those who are leaders in affiliated clubs.
The point of rehashing this isn't necessarily to persuade anyone to change their mind. Clearly I have my opinion on the matter. Rather, it's to implore residents to consider the information they are being fed. There are two polls that appear to be far more scientific than those pushed by opponents to the deal, and they both show broad support.
There is absolutely opposition, and those opponents no doubt have the city and its residents' best interest in mind. But this idea that opposition is widespread, is widely refuted, with data.
At the end of the day, this may very well be our last and best chance at not only keeping the Rays in St. Pete, but to have a development partner with the resources and experience needed to tackle a project of this size in a cohesive way.
Remember, the plan includes more than a baseball stadium — it also comes with affordable housing, a new African American history museum, parks space, hotels, retail, offices and more.
No comments:
Post a Comment