How the city’s negotiations with Keystone Group broke down

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Keystone Group officials say they have committed $26 million so far to develop a stadium district at the former Diamond Chain Manufacturing site. The work included razing the former factory complex. (IBJ photo/Mickey Shuey)

To hear city officials tell it, the decision to walk away from the Eleven Park development planned for the west side of downtown was in the best interest of taxpayers.

But from the perspective of Keystone Group—whose owner, Ersal Ozdemir, has committed some $26 million and used nearly every bit of political will that he can muster to get the $1.5 billion project off the ground—the move was driven by misplaced ambitions and a lack of interest in discussing specifics of the project’s finances.

Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett said last week the city would pursue a bid to join Major League Soccer, following a meeting with the league’s commissioner, Don Garber, in New York.

That move came one month after the city quietly ended its negotiations on March 26 with Keystone on the Eleven Park project on the former Diamond Chain Manufacturing Co. site, where excavation is underway to clear historic artifacts and remains from its use as a cemetery more than a century ago.

The move also seemed to usurp an effort to land an MLS team that Ozdemir and his confidants have long said was the ultimate goal of a new stadium for the Indy Eleven franchise, even if it meant he wasn’t the majority owner in such an endeavor.

For Ozdemir, the blow affects more than soccer. It imperils the larger Eleven Park district he was planning to build around a stadium.

“This transformational mixed-use development is set to transform the riverfront and connect the southside and westside to downtown Indianapolis,” he told IBJ. “Eleven Park’s development brings revitalization to an underutilized area of Indianapolis and creates a complete live-work-play-stay village wanted by the community.”

Financing concerns

In putting the kibosh on talks with Keystone, city officials have said the project had a funding gap that would have put the public on the hook for large portions of the mixed-use development.

Aliya Wishner, chief communications director for the Hogsett administration, said the Eleven Park project posed “a serious risk to Indianapolis taxpayers” because the city believed the company didn’t have the money to pay for parts of the project that were to be privately financed.

Wishner said concerns about Keystone’s proposal festered as city leaders started negotiations on the Eleven Park project in December after securing legislative approvals for a professional sports development area map that would be used to capture tax revenue within a mile of Eleven Park to pay for a large portion of the planned $250 million Indy Eleven stadium.

By the end of March, the city had determined that Keystone’s proposal “would never work financially for Indianapolis taxpayers,” Wishner said in emailed responses to questions from IBJ. “There was a funding gap of many millions of dollars per year that increased depending on [public] funding scenarios.”

The city has so far declined to share details about its concerns—including the specific amount that would have to be bridged to make the project viable. And the Mayor’s Office took steps to ensure that Democrats on the City-County Council didn’t talk as a group with Ozdemir and Keystone about the financing plan in advance of Hogsett’s announcement about the MLS effort.

Ozdemir told IBJ his plan would have ensured Eleven Park was “built in a fiscally responsible way and does not call for any new taxes or appropriations from city or state governments.”

But an application for tax-increment-financing incentives the company submitted to the city in February, which IBJ obtained, shows the company was requesting as much as $243 million to support construction of three public parking garages with a total of 4,000 spaces. That money would come from property tax revenue captured within the TIF district.

Wishner said the city’s concerns “grew considerably” with the submission of that request, which would come on top of state and local tax revenue that would be used to pay off bonds for stadium construction.

Keystone officials characterized the $243 million figure as a maximum—and one they said would likely be reduced during negotiations with the city.

But instead of focusing on that figure, Keystone officials said, the city provided a list of four concerns it wanted the company to address before continuing talks. According to Keystone:

 The city wanted to bid the stadium portion of the project publicly—rather than have Keystone build the facility, then transfer it to city ownership. Keystone would still be responsible for developing the private portions of Eleven Park.

 It wanted detailed information about how Ozdemir planned to pay for its required 20% of stadium construction.

 It also said Keystone would be required to use developer-backed bonds for a tax-increment-financing district for the project. That is common practice for the city, but Keystone had requested that the bonds be backed by revenue from the city’s downtown TIF district and receive other credit enhancements to keep interest rates lower and entice bond buyers.

 The city said it would require Keystone to whip up the City-County Council votes needed to approve the incentives, a duty that is typically carried out by the administration itself.

Keystone officials said the company was able to directly address each concern and agree to the city’s terms. They then asked for a meeting to discuss the project in more detail, including financial terms and the company’s interest in securing a deal in the next few months.

But two days after Keystone agreed to the city’s terms, company officials said, the Hogsett administration said it was walking away from the negotiations unless the developer could guarantee it could land an MLS franchise—something Ozdemir was interested in pursuing but had no way to guarantee. Keystone officials said that was the first time the city said an MLS commitment was necessary for building a stadium.

Wishner, the Hogsett spokeswoman, said Keystone had not “adequately addressed” the city’s terms. And city officials told Ozdemir and others then that it had plans for a new stadium at a different site—and with a different ownership group.

Already, Tom Glick, a longtime professional soccer executive who first met with the Hogsett team in January, had met three times with Keystone to discuss the potential ownership group for a Major League Soccer franchise. Keystone officials took Glick on a tour of the Eleven Park site in January and explained more about the company’s investments in the project so far. Keystone officials told IBJ the company and Ozdemir have already invested more than $26 million in the project.

But they said Glick was unwilling to share details about the investment group or its plans, making real negotiations about ownership all but impossible. In all, Keystone met with Glick four times over the span of four months, including on April 11.

Keystone officials said Ozdemir is open to joining the ownership group, even with a minority stake, and has asked to meet with other owners directly to discuss their involvement. So far, they said, Glick has declined to set up those talks.

A specific site

As part of Ozdemir’s efforts to develop Eleven Park, the City-County Council last fall established the professional sports development area that would generate tax revenue to pay for much of the stadium’s construction. But Keystone officials say the Hogsett administration has never submitted the PSDA paperwork to the state, which is necessary to make it official.

“Unfortunately, after years of good-faith negotiations and recent bipartisan approvals from the City-County Council, Mayor Joe Hogsett’s administration is preparing to walk away from the state and city leaders who entrusted him with this project and the neighborhoods who are depending on the progress Eleven Park represents,” Keystone said in a statement it released just hours before Hogsett’s announcement that the city would try to land an MLS team with a different ownership group.

“These actions by Mayor Hogsett’s administration are a concerning departure from what the Indianapolis business community stands for: integrity, trust, and the expectation that one is true to their word,” the statement said. “A dangerous precedent is being set for how city negotiators conduct themselves.”

Hogsett said during last week’s announcement that the city would begin work to create a professional sports development area that could be used for a stadium development at 355 E. Pearl St., next to the Indianapolis Downtown heliport. On Wednesday, the city’s Metropolitan Development Commission voted 7-1 to advance the mayor’s new PSDA map to the City-County Council for consideration.

Even so, city officials said the former Diamond Chain site could still be an option.

But the new ownership group could be hard-pressed to secure that site without bringing Ozdemir into the project, as Keystone owns the property through a holding company. The city doesn’t own it and doesn’t have options to buy it or any other legal ability to use it.

Ultimately, the city can only submit one PSDA to the State Budget Committee, which has authority over the taxing district. City officials said the site decision will be made by the ownership group following the city’s legislative process, which includes necessary approvals from the Metropolitan Development Committee and the Indianapolis City-County Council. But multiple sources told IBJ the preferred site is the heliport.

And a Keystone official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the company believes the city and incoming owners have “already decided and made clear, that if this alternative map gets passed, the Diamond Chain site goes away, the Indy Eleven goes away.”

City officials have denied that the heliport site is being given top billing over the Diamond Chain location, indicating they view both as strong options.

The heliport site, though, has already been controversial. It is controlled by the Indianapolis Airport Authority, which has sought to decommission it. The city has the first option to develop the site if that happens, which IBJ reported last year.

Chuck Surack

Chuck Surack, founder of Fort Wayne-based Sweetwater Sound and the owner of Sweet Helicopters and other companies that use the heliport, is among several business leaders who oppose the effort to close the heliport and use the land for development.

And Surack is frustrated by what he sees as unfair dealings with Keystone Group. “I’d like to think that, when you’re dealing with politicians, their word you can count on,” Surack said of the city’s approach. “And at least from everything I’m seeing, it looks pretty political right now and not real honest.”

Surack said he plans to maintain ownership of a 10-story building he acquired directly east of the heliport as a “strategic move.” He said he could use property to develop a helistop—an area where helicopters can land but cannot be stored for long periods—if the airport authority moves forward with decommissioning the heliport.

The helistop concept is “not ideal,” he said, but “I bought it because it was available and I thought, to be real frank, that it might prevent the heliport from being torn down, so it was a little bit strategic.”

Surack said he’d be willing to develop the site if the heliport stays put. “But right now,” he said, “it’s just kind of marking place for me.”

Another property owner near the heliport, Lena Hackett, told IBJ she received a written offer last week from an undisclosed buyer represented by the Indianapolis office of Cushman & Wakefield for her 0.3-acre parcel at 10 S. New Jersey St., just south of Maryland Street.

She declined to disclose the offer amount but said she turned it down.

“I’m not interested in selling my building,” she told IBJ. “And I am not interested in being any part of whatever is going on.”

Crews were continuing to work Wednesday clearing the Diamond Chain site. (IBJ photo/Mickey Shuey)

Political problems?

This week, the Democratic caucus of the City-County Council issued a statement indicating its members have “more questions than answers” about the Hogsett administration’s MLS plans. The caucus said its members are eager to learn more before acting on the new PSDA proposal.

Sources said many councilors in the 19-member caucus haven’t been given details about the project and have concerns about how Ozdemir will be treated in the deal.

“Pursuing a Major League Soccer team could strengthen our city’s reputation, enhance tourism, and boost our economy,” the statement said. “Currently, we believe there is more work to do to understand the repercussions of this strategy.”

Among the most vocal has been Councilor Kristin Jones, who represents District 18, where both proposed sites are located. Following the MDC’s vote on Wednesday, Jones indicated that the Hogsett administration might face an uphill battle in finding a council sponsor—and eventually council support—for the new PSDA proposal.

When asked who would sponsor the proposal at an upcoming council meeting, Jones said she did not know of a member who would be willing to sponsor it. Sponsorship by a council member is required for a proposal to be considered.

Jones said that typically the councilor who represents the district where the project is located is the one to sponsor the proposal. “And I am telling you,” she said, “I am not sponsoring this proposal. So they will need to look for a different author.”

She said her constituents “want Eleven Park to be built as planned, regardless of which jerseys are worn on that field.”

For its part, the city has said it has discussed the effort with multiple council leaders. “The mayor’s representatives not only had discussions with council leadership, but also individual councilors, leading up to the mayor’s announcement on the opportunity for the city to pursue a Major League Soccer expansion club and the importance of creating a new PSDA map,” Wishner said.

“We are still in the early stages of this extensive process and look forward to continuing our conversations with councilors on this exciting opportunity to bring the major league of the world’s game to Indianapolis,” she said in a written statement.

The city sent a letter on April 20—two days before Hogsett’s meeting with Garber—discouraging councilors from speaking with Keystone about its project during a caucus meeting. The city cited the state’s Open Door Law—which generally prevents a majority of council members from meeting privately—among other issues.

“What seems to be occurring … here is a developer skipping ahead in the process to get the formal attention of the Democratic Caucus in order to influence the outcome of arrangements that are not yet ripe,” reads a portion of the letter, a copy of which IBJ obtained.

The letter, authored by Feagre Drinker attorney Scott Chinn, who is representing the city on the MLS deal, also suggests that the caucus be wary of conversations with Keystone “until there are more definite proposals to discuss.”

The City-County Council is set to consider the new PSDA map on May 13, as the city stares down the June 30 deadline to complete its legislative processes.•

Correction: This story has been corrected to reflect that the city told Keystone Group it wanted to choose and oversee the contractors for the stadium portion of the Eleven Park project, while Keystone would be responsible for the private portions. See more corrections here.

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17 thoughts on “How the city’s negotiations with Keystone Group broke down

  1. All the tears for Keystone and Indy Eleven, but they had financing issues and were likely going to be far back in line to gain an MLS team on the current path.

    A stadium where the heliport is would bring a much needed change to that section of downtown. Looks like some of the individual stakeholders are going to make that transition difficult.

    1. The heliport is a terrible site and does nothing for improving the property tax basis of the area around it, like the Diamond Chain site would do. The city’s taxpayers would do better with it on Diamond Chain.

    2. The Diamond Chain site is and always will be the BEST location for this stadium (if it gets built).

  2. Keystone Group had great ambition but used the emotions of the Indy Eleven fan base to slightly deceive them of the reality at hand. Keystone Group knew they couldn’t complete Eleven Park as rendered and thought by breaking ground and moving some dirt around that other investors with BIG pockets would want to join in once they saw activity and movement going on the site. Unfortunately this was all smoking mirrors and the city went over the financial records and discovered this wasn’t a good deal for the city and tax payers. I believe Keystone wanted to use the site as a bargaining chip for Ozdemir to use as leverage to gain access as a partner in MLS ownership. I would say that the diamond chain site is the more attractive site but I think the entire way Ozdemir somewhat decieved the city has left a bad taste in the mouth of the Hogsett administration. I doubt the city would want to negotiate to buy back the site but city council and the economic development board might make it a suggestion. The land is already cleared and you wont have to spend to tear down the heliport ect. It would seem to be cheaper to just buy back the site from Ozdemir because it’s shovel ready. Then there’s the fans. We all know that the ones who signs the checks will make the final decision in the end. I just want to see something amazing and transformative finally be built in Indy and Eleven Park was something that I think most people would have been proud of. Just driving by the site and seeing the renderings canvased around the metal fencing sort of brought pride to residents to see the heavy machinery at work. Sort of the same thing happened with Ambrose ambitious development for the GM Stamping plant that fell through. Why can cities like Nashville and Austin get major project like this done but Indy can’t? It’s starting to test the pride of the city. Even Milwaukee is expanding its convention and just built The Contour downtown. Lets not mention the tallest skyscraper supposed to be built in OKC!

    1. A reminder that Indianapolis is also in the midst of expanding its convention center.

      I’d like to see this project get done too, but it seems quite clear that the Keystone Group is only going to get this project done if they can get their friends at the Statehouse to give them lots of state money because the city of Indianapolis doesn’t think it’s a great idea to give them city money. Fortunately for Ozdemir, we have a proven track record in Indiana of overruling what cities think are best, so let’s see what happens the next few months.

    2. Nashville and Austin are in the tier of cities just above Indy’s. People need to realize this. Those are not peer cities for Indy.

  3. I admit i know little about the back story. However I feel the city had the greater responsibility to clearly think through and contract its intentions for our city.

    Lately, our city’s soldiers, powerful or not, continue to make these development mistakes as they walk down the path of our city’s growth.

  4. The pompous mayor should only have had an ‘announcement’ IF his undercover meeting in NY provided a definitive YES from MLS. Secondly, and more importantly, making a pitch to MLS with so many unsettled issues here was beyond naive and arrogant. If Hogsett needed to make an ‘announcement’ it appropriately would have been updating the status of Keystone’s relationship in going forward. Nothing more. One doesn’t normally divulge the preliminary results of high level meetings until something substantial had been agreed upon. Hogsett’s actions aren’t unlike a 16-17 year old kid getting a tentative ‘ok’ from a popular girl at school for the prom but ‘only’ if her actual boyfriend’s parents decide not to move, that he provide a new luxury car to the dance, buy her a $1000 dress for the event, buy, not rent a $500 tuxedo, get his acne cleared up and teeth fixed, while arranging for dinner at the swankiest place in town. Then, then…..MAYBE she’d consider.

    1. Or, hear me out, MLS has been talking to Glick (repping a viable ownership group) for some time, MLS approved the financial viability, and then tagged in Hogsett to let him know there was a group that passed checkpoint 1 (when XI have never done that). I’m not terribly ignorant, I know the sparring between the city and Keystone. So, yes, Joe wasn’t sad about leaving XI behind for now.

  5. No one is mentioning that the buried Greenlawn Cemetery is a big factor for the Diamond Chain site. Current state law is relatively strict in its provisions for digging up/developing old cemetery land, and it would significantly impact the cost and development timeline.

  6. What no one is divulging, if Hogsett was uncomfortable with Keystone’s inability to handle this solo, and supposedly having lined up a separate investor group, why weren’t these potential principals brought together in order to combine resources before making a ‘half baked’ pitch?
    The ONLY actual obstacle would have been Keystone not agreeing to being a ‘partner’ in the enterprise. All this shows MLS is that from an administrative and financial standpoint Indianapolis isn’t ready. If this were a poker hand Keystone and Hogsett would be writing IOU’s on their way out the door.

  7. Is an MLS new team entrance fee really $500M? If so, don’t see the local Indy 11 ownership being able to swing that, but would want to know who truly has the deep pockets to do so if this is a real opportunity? I’m for continuing to grow downtown Indy, and soccer is a growing sport in terms of popularity. But we need to have a solid structure and plan as I don’t think Indy can do a repeat of building the Hoosier Dome and then hoping a team will follow like the Colts did then. Different time/era. We shall see.

    1. It’s probably higher by now and more likely by the time we would ever get in.

  8. “Major League Soccer has awarded an expansion franchise to San Diego, the league announced Thursday, after the ownership group paid a staggering $500 million fee to start a club in Southern California.” This was in 2023 they will begin play in 2025.
    San Diego FC is going to utilize a stadium on San Diego State University.

    The MLS is not going to be caught in the middle of a dispute between Indy 11 and City of Indianapolis. So until such time as this is resolved, this proposal is not moving forward for MLS in Indy.

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