Backers of a ballot initiative that would pave the way for San Diego State University to acquire the SDCCU Stadium property for campus expansion plan to submit their petitions to election officials Tuesday.
Friends of SDSU will gather at 4 p.m. Tuesday at the San Diego County Registrar of Voters to submit more than 100,000 petition signatures to be verified by officials. To appear on the ballot, the group needs 71,646 verified signatures.
City Councilwoman Barbara Bry, Fred Pierce of Friends of SDSU and others will speak in support of the effort.
"Once verified, these signatures will qualify SDSU West for a 2018 ballot," said Kim Kilkenny of Friends of SDSU. "With overwhelming support for SDSU and the positive impacts the university provides to our community, San Diegans clearly support SDSU West to ensure the Mission Valley stadium site is used to benefit the public, provide a place for SDSU to grow and thrive, and guarantee a permanent, public river park and open space."
The Friends group had until the end of March to collect signatures but members previously indicated they wanted to wrap up the signature drive by the end of the year.
If enough signatures are verified, the City Council will decide whether to adopt the initiative or place it before voters. A competing initiative, which would result in a soccer-centric commercial development, qualified earlier this year and will go onto a 2018 ballot.
If both SDSU West and SoccerCity are approved in an election, the one that receives the most votes would be adopted.
The SDSU West initiative would lead to the sale of the property to SDSU, which would be required to create a comprehensive development plan.
School officials in the fall outlined their vision for the project, including 1.6 million square feet of classroom and research buildings, a river park and open space, 4,500 housing units, retail shops, a pair of hotels and a multi-use, 35,000-seat stadium for college football and other sports.
SDSU Interim President Sally Roush and JMI Realty CEO John Kratzer said the project would be mostly funded by public-private partnerships, and wouldn't rely on taxpayer financing. The main exception would be the stadium, which would be funded by bonds to be paid back by future revenues.
The land is three trolley stops from the built-out main campus.