Orange County officials are still scrutinizing a request to use tourist tax dollars to bring the 2019 MLS All-Star game to Orlando City Stadium.

Expecting an agreement to be reached soon, Deputy County Administrator Eric Gassman said the issue could likely appear on the Sept. 12 meeting agenda for the Orange County Commission.

“I think we’re getting pretty close,” he said. “We’re not too far off the date.”

The Central Florida Sports Commission originally sought $350,000 to cover operations for bringing the 2019 all-game — and festivities leading up to the marquee match — to Orlando.

In June, the sports commission’s interim president Jason Siegel said the league’s deadline to bid on the game was this Friday — a tight deadline for the county that left only two months to examine the costs needed and economic benefit to the community.

“Leadership at City Soccer is in conversation with MLS and we are hopeful that we will be able to submit our bid in the very near future,” Siegel wrote in an email Thursday.

The MLS official who oversees bidding is on vacation, a league spokesman said.

What makes the sports commission’s request unique is it would be the first time the 6 percent tax on hotels and motels is used to support an event run by a private group. The Orlando City Stadium is owned and operated privately.

But local officials have recently supported recruiting more sporting events to Orlando.

For instance, last year, the county board approved spending $3 million of the hotel tax to bring the NFL Pro Bowl Game from Hawaii to Camping World Stadium for the next three years.

In November, the county commission set up an initial $5 million fund — money from the hotel tax — for a sports bid fund for future events.

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