Mary­land sen­a­tors will approve RFK sta­di­um deal in exchange for Air Nation­al Guard squadron: Report

Maryland senators will approve RFK stadium deal in exchange for Air National Guard squadron: Report

Maryland’s sen­a­tors are report­ed­ly look­ing to barter their approval of the Wash­ing­ton Com­man­ders leav­ing North­west Sta­di­um in Lan­dover, Mary­land, in exchange for one of D.C.’s Air Nation­al Guard squadrons head­ing back their way.

Wash­ing­ton, D.C., lead­ers want to rede­vel­op the defunct Robert F. Kennedy Sta­di­um, locat­ed along the banks of the Ana­cos­tia Riv­er, so that the Wash­ing­ton Com­man­ders will return to play­ing their home games in Wash­ing­ton. They have been search­ing for a new home for years, but new devel­op­ments have revealed just how far recent dis­cus­sions have gone.

Own­er Josh Har­ris, who only bought the team in July 2023, has called Wash­ing­ton, D.C., the top choice for the Com­man­ders over Vir­ginia and Mary­land. Har­ris and NFL Com­mis­sion­er Roger Good­ell have spo­ken with top con­gres­sion­al lead­ers, includ­ing Sen­ate Major­i­ty Leader Chuck Schumer (D‑NY), accord­ing to the Wash­ing­ton Post.

Schumer report­ed­ly told Good­ell and Har­ris they need­ed to “solve [the prob­lem] with the Mary­land sen­a­tors,” a source famil­iar with the mat­ter told the out­let.

The land that RFK Sta­di­um resides on belongs to the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment, so rede­vel­op­ing the sta­di­um requires con­gres­sion­al approval.

The bill, which would autho­rize the stadium’s rede­vel­op­ment, passed the House and moved from a Sen­ate com­mit­tee with bipar­ti­san sup­port, but with the con­gres­sion­al ses­sion quick­ly com­ing to a close, the bill’s sup­port­ers lob­bied for the bill to be attached to the Nation­al Defense Autho­riza­tion Act, which must be passed this year. 

Sens. Ben Cardin (D‑MD) and Chris Van Hollen (D‑MD) have said they would only vote in favor of the RFK pro­vi­sion in exchange for the D.C. Air Nation­al Guard giv­ing Mary­land one of its squadrons.

In a state­ment, Cardin and Van Hollen said it would not be fair for the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment to take land away for free, which would give Wash­ing­ton an advan­tage in acquir­ing the Commanders’s home games.

“It’s not in the best inter­est of fed­er­al tax­pay­ers, and good-faith nego­ti­a­tions should be on a lev­el play­ing field,” the sen­a­tors said in a state­ment. “We will con­tin­ue press­ing for a fair process and direct engage­ment between Mary­land and the Com­man­ders.”

The RFK Sta­di­um deal’s pas­sage would not guar­an­tee the dis­trict gains con­trol of the team’s sta­di­um, but it would expe­dite the abil­i­ty for rede­vel­op­ment plans and nego­ti­a­tions with the Com­man­ders.

The push for Mary­land to acquire one of the D.C. Air Nation­al Guard’s air squadrons came after the U.S. Air Force decid­ed in March that it would end Maryland’s fly­ing mis­sion upon the retire­ment of 21 aging planes. In exchange, the state would receive a ground unit with cyber respon­si­bil­i­ties if approved by Con­gress. The plan would not allow for the state to retain expe­ri­enced pilots in its guard.

In April, the state’s con­gres­sion­al lead­ers called for Wash­ing­ton, D.C., to give Mary­land con­trol of D.C.’s 121st squadron, accord­ing to the out­let.

This sug­ges­tion gen­er­at­ed strong oppo­si­tion from Wash­ing­ton, D.C., lead­ers, with Demo­c­ra­t­ic D.C. Del. Eleanor Holmes Nor­ton writ­ing in a let­ter to U.S. Air Force Sec­re­tary Frank Kendall that this would “gut” D.C. Air Nation­al Guard.

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“Trans­fer would leave the DCNG with no avi­a­tion units, forc­ing it to be reliant on the good­will of oth­er Nation­al Guards for com­mon avi­a­tion mat­ters that arise in D.C., such as inter­cept­ing air­craft, patrolling the skies, and res­cu­ing or evac­u­at­ing peo­ple in emer­gen­cies,” Nor­ton said in a state­ment on Tues­day. “While D.C. could request assis­tance from oth­er Nation­al Guards, there is no guar­an­tee the air assets would be pro­vid­ed in a time­ly man­ner — or at all.”

Mean­while, revamp­ing the vacant sta­di­um has been on Dis­trict of Colum­bia May­or Muriel Bowser’s radar for quite some time. Find­ings from a study she com­mis­sioned revealed that reopen­ing RFK could result in 2,095 new jobs per year and $1.26 bil­lion in annu­al rev­enue.