The state's top auditor said he's opened a "priority" investigation into the Minnesota Sports Facilities Authority's control of two prime luxury suites in U.S. Bank Stadium. Separately, the state senator who sponsored the bill authorizing the stadium said she's "disgusted" by the lack of transparency by the authority over who uses the suites at Vikings games and other events.
Legislative Auditor Jim Nobles said Wednesday that he had begun an inquiry into the MSFA's "control and use of suites in the U.S. Bank Stadium."
The nonpartisan office conducts routine audits on the financial activities of state agencies and boards and investigates potential wrongdoing.
Incoming Senate Finance Chairwoman Julie Rosen, R-Vernon Center, who sponsored the stadium legislation, said she wants the names of suite guests to be public. Rosen said "drastic" action needs to be taken by either Gov. Mark Dayton or the Legislature to bring accountability and credibility to the MSFA. "Right now, it's apparent they're trying to hide something," she said.
In a statement, Dayton said he deferred to the MSFA on its handling of the suites, saying the group was continuing a Metrodome tradition of using suites to market the building. The governor also said that Rosen raised "legitimate concerns" and he welcomed an examination by Nobles.
"My standard is that every public dollar should be expended for a public purpose, and that standard should be applied to this practice as well," he wrote. "However, I do not believe that this episode should be allowed to overshadow the phenomenal accomplishments of" the MSFA, its chairwoman, Michele Kelm-Helgen, and executive director, Ted Mondale. "They built for the people of Minnesota a multipurpose stadium on time and on budget," he said.
The $1.1 billion stadium is the largest public-private partnership in state history, with taxpayers contributing almost $500 million. Dayton in 2012 appointed Kelm-Helgen, then his deputy chief of staff for legislative affairs, to her position with the MSFA, which was charged with the design, construction and operation of the stadium. She and Mondale have decades of ties to the governor and the DFL through their fathers.
There was growing concern Wednesday from Republicans about the DFL-controlled MSFA and who is using the suites. Two House Republicans, including Rep. Peggy Scott of Andover, chairwoman of the data practices committee, said they will hold a news conference Thursday to call for increased transparency about who gets invited to the suite for events.