Rose Bowl officials this week said Pasadena would conduct a full environmental review if the city decides to proceed with tentative plans to host an NFL team in the coming years.
The report would cost up to $300,000 and take an estimated nine months, meaning there is no chance of a team coming to town in 2012. The prospects of that were slight anyway, as developers of proposed permanent stadiums in downtown Los Angeles and the City of Industry have not convinced a team to relocate to Los Angeles.
Bringing an NFL team to the Rose Bowl on a temporary basis is attractive to city and stadium officials, since Pasadena is facing a tight budget and the Rose Bowl Operating Co. is trying to close a $16-million funding gap in its ongoing $156-million renovation of the stadium.
A 2004 NFL economic impact report found that if the Rose Bowl hosted a pro-football team, the games would generate $3.1 million in spending on tickets, concessions, hotel rooms and other purchases in Pasadena, and would deliver $140,273 in taxes to the city. A single Super Bowl game could generate spending of $4.3 million in the city.
