The Cleveland Browns have drawn significant attention this offseason-not only for their crowded quarterback room, which includes four players competing for the starting role, but also because one of them is Shedeur Sanders, son of NFL legend Deion Sanders. His presence alone has stirred national headlines and fueled media buzz around the franchise.
Now, however, the team is making headlines for a different reason: a controversial funding plan related to the construction of their new stadium, which is scheduled for completion by the end of this decade.
According to a report by NFL insider Mike Florio, a group of Ohio legislators is pursuing legal action against a funding proposal put forth by the Cleveland Browns and the state of Ohio. At the center of the controversy is a $600 million portion of the stadium budget that would allegedly be sourced from Ohio’s pool of ‘unclaimed funds’.
In the lawsuit, legislators argue that these are private funds and therefore cannot legally be used to finance the stadium’s development.
“The state now intends to confiscate the private property . . . for the purpose of funding a private development, depriving the rightful owners of their property… The state intends to do so, even though it has long been settled that funds held by the state of Ohio in its ‘unclaimed funds’ account are private property,” the lawsuit claims.
At this point, it remains unclear what will ultimately happen with the contested $600 million earmarked for the Browns’ stadium project.
Stadium construction will proceed regardless
Despite the legal challenge, Florio reports that the project is moving forward as originally planned. According to the Associated Press, the new stadium will be built in the Cleveland suburb of Brook Park.
The construction won’t be limited to a stadium alone. The site will also include an entertainment complex estimated to cost around $2.4 billion, adding even more scale and ambition to the overall project.
The Cleveland Browns are set to kick off their regular season on Sunday, September 7, at home against in-state rivals the Cincinnati Bengals.
In the meantime, fans will continue watching their team at the current stadium, a place where they’ve endured many tough afternoons and long, bitter nights-hoping that, with this new chapter, better days are finally on the horizon.
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