Oakland may lose out on millions to advance proposed A's ballpark at Howard Terminal

MLB commissioner expresses doubts about Athletics staying in Oakland

OAKLAND – Oakland may miss out on millions of dollars in grant money that could advance the Oakland A's proposed ballpark at the city's port.

The U.S. Department of Transportation failed to recommend that Oakland get $182.9 million in the initial round of funding for the city's Waterfront Mobility Project. Oakland has not received official word that it was denied the grant money.

The city has been securing dollars for the offsite infrastructure needed to support a new ballpark at the Charles P. Howard Terminal.

"While we are disappointed to have not been selected in the first round, we believe we put forward a strong application and are well positioned to secure other funding sources," said Fred Kelley, director of the Oakland Department of Transportation. "We will continue to pursue other funding sources to ensure our projects have the resources they need."

Oakland applied for grant money through the Mega Grant Program, which funds "large, complex projects that are difficult to fund by other means and likely to generate national or regional economic, mobility, or safety benefits."

The ballpark proposed by the Oakland A's would seat about 35,000 people, and the development overall consists of new housing, parkland, an entertainment venue and commercial space.

Not everyone wants the A's to build a new park at the Port of Oakland. Groups have come together in opposition, hoping to have the A's build a new park in East Oakland at the current Oakland Coliseum site.

Groups led by the Pacific Merchant Shipping Association sued to stop Oakland from issuing a required environmental impact report for the proposed ballpark.

The opponents said the lack of a recommendation by the U.S. Department of Transportation "shows the lack of credibility—likely based on concerns over safety, economic viability, disruptions to port traffic and supply chains, echoed by maritime stakeholders—for the future of the project with key public transportation and political stakeholders that should prompt an overall re-evaluation."

A city document suggests $600 million will be needed for offsite infrastructure. The city has secured or is in the process of securing more than $320 million of that money, according to city documents published in December.

Former Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf was a strong supporter of the project.

New Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao said at her inauguration Monday that she'll be working with the Oakland A's, Major League Baseball and other stakeholders on a deal to keep the team in Oakland while protecting Oakland values.

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