Flyers’ Ehrenreich gets rich, taxpayers get soaked
November 24th, 2008 | by Brian Costin Published in Blog, Corporate Welfare, Features, Media Hits, Taxes | 2 Comments
Since 1999, Schaumburg taxpayers have been forced to give nearly $20 million to build a stadium and assist the operation of the Schaumburg Flyers Professional Baseball corporation. Area residents and businesses also have had to make up the multi-million-dollar property tax exemption granted to the stadium.
It should come to no surprise that Richard Ehrenreich has made a fortune from this lavish corporate welfare and special tax breaks. A report in Satisfaction Magazine in October 2006 stated “Ehrenreich’s 1999 investment of just over $1 million may well be worth $8 million to $10 million today.”
Now we learn Ehrenreich has an extensive track record of not paying vendors, employees, the Schaumburg Park District, or the Village of Schaumburg on time (Oct. 9, “Flyers owe Schaumburg, park district, employees“). Why do the Schaumburg village board and Mayor Al Larson continue to soak us for a deadbeat business owner getting rich on the taxpayers’ dime?
There is no time like now for Schaumburg to end corporate welfare, sell the stadium and the surrounding land to the highest bidder, and recoup as much of the taxpayers’ expenses as possible. Schaumburg’s experiment in corporate welfare for professional sports teams has failed miserably.
This Letter to the Editor was published in the October 27 edition of the Daily Herald.
Related posts:
- Let the People Vote on Schaumburg Property Tax The citizens of Schaumburg should have the power to approve...
- Schaumburg Bureau President on Taxpayer-Financed Trip to Copenhagen Shouldn't we be looking for ways to cut wasteful government...


September 29th, 2009 at 8:53 PM (#)
[...] & corporate welfare at the foreclosed Hoffman Estates Sears Center, taxpayer subsidized Schaumburg Flyers at Alexian Field, and Arlington Park [...]
November 21st, 2009 at 11:02 PM (#)
[...] to cut unnecessary and wasteful spending, including the Hotel & Convention Center, Airport, and Baseball Stadium, which combined cost area taxpayers over $10 million per year to operate and [...]