Will sports-and-entertainment arenas get federal grants as "Shuttered Venue Operators"? Unlikely, but...
The Shuttered Venue Operators Grant (SVOG) program was established through the Economic Aid to Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits and Venues Act and amended by the American Rescue Plan Act to provide over $16 billion in economic relief to target industries. The SVOG application is slated to open April 8, 2021.
It is not likely. While sports are not a form of performing art, if the operator of a sports stadium or similar athletic arena can meet the statutory definition of an eligible entity under the Economic Aid Act, including the requirement that its principal business activity must be the organization, promotion, management, or hosting of live concerts, comedy shows, theatrical productions or other events by performing artists, it should be eligible to apply for an SVOG.
(Emphases added)
You'd think that, with the Brooklyn Nets as anchor tenant, the Barclays Center defines itself as presenting professional sports events.
That said, historically concerts and family shows make up more than half (or nearly half) of the non-NBA (and non-NHL) events at the arena.
So, depending on the year chosen--including the pandemic year, with the full schedule of events never announced--it might be possible to argue that the Barclays Center's "principal business activity" was hosting performing artists.
To determine a given firm’s principal business activity, the SBA will consider the distribution of an entity’s receipts, employees and costs of doing business among the different lines of business activity in which its business operations occurred for the most recently completed fiscal year. An entity's principal business activity will be the one in which it has the greatest combined amount of revenues, expenses, employees and work hours, assets, contracts, and other business activity as compared to all its other lines of business. The SBA may also consider other factors, such as the distribution of patents, contract awards, and assets, as appropriate.
That said, presumably the Brooklyn Nets represent a disproportionate amount of revenues and expenses, given that, unlike performing arts events, the arena is more likely to be filled.
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