Union Omaha’s $25M Turnback: Public Taxes Dribbling into a Private Pitch
Nebraska’s approval of a turnback-tax play for a new Union Omaha stadium redirects $25M from sales taxes, spotlighting the blurred lines between public funds and private benefit.
It’s a classic case of muddy sneakers on white carpet. The Nebraska Sports Arena Facility Financing Assistance Act (SAFFAA) Board has given the nod to a $25 million turnback-tax subsidy for Union Omaha’s shiny new soccer stadium. It’s fiscal sleight of hand at its finest, redirecting up to 70% of new state sales tax generated in the area back into the stadium’s construction. And why not? What’s public money if not a pinata filled with favors for private ventures?
This financial maneuver was greenlit on May 7, 2026, when the SAFFAA Board decided Omaha needed another boost in the form of curling soccer pitches and confetti-spouting economic projections. Proponents see it as economic development. Critics might wonder if it’s more like a monetary shell game where the sales tax bean keeps magically ending up in the stadium’s cup.
If you’re scratching your head about why rainbows are being pointed at the $140 million project, it’s because the Omaha City Council already approved a $48 million tax-increment financing (TIF) plan earlier. With all that borrowed money, one’s reminded of a poker hand where the stakes keep rising, even as the taxpayers are all-in without a look at the cards.
Unlike buying hot dogs at the game, these taxpayer-funded goodies aren’t given away lightly. The SAFFAA board, in a move reminiscent of a dour school principal denying hall passes, rejected nine other projects vying for similar benevolence. Makes you wonder what magic spell the soccer stadium conjured while others were left to scrimmage in the fiscal mud.
The promised mixed-use development surrounding this soccer Mecca is supposed to usher in a new era of prosperity—that elusive unicorn politicians love to chase in funding proposals. Yet, history is littered with grand developments that promised to shower gold but delivered scattered rain.
This turnback tax is a product of legislative pretzel logic (thank you, LB1317), designed to appear as both a public good and a private benefit. But when taxpayers fund a privately operated asset, the field seems to tilt precariously. As you contribute to the state coffers during your next shopping spree in Omaha, remember: a portion of every sale funds the newly-minted grass any aspiring soccer star might dribble on.
The nine projects left on the cutting room floor reflect a brutal hierarchy where only the savvy survive. The tale here is more than just about a stadium; it’s about the economic charade and the dance of the dollar behind closed boardroom doors.
So, as you sip your cappuccino next time in Omaha, glance toward that stadium and reflect on the art of the deal that brought it to life. Beneath the glitz and pom-poms, taxpayers hold the weight of promises not yet realized, an optimistic prospectus bound as a real estate project.
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