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Hamilton

Ticats and city still at odds over stadium issues

The city is still at odds with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats over whether the new Tim Hortons Field stadium is substantially complete. But officials are staying tight lipped about what they plan to do about it.
The city and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats are meeting behind closed doors around disagreements about deficiencies with Tim Hortons Field stadium. (Samantha Craggs/ CBC)

The city is still at odds with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats over whether the new Tim Hortons Field stadium is substantially complete. But officials are staying tight lipped about what they plan to do about it.

City councillors met behind closed doors on Wednesday to talk about a licensing agreement with the Ticats.

The CFL team says the licensing agreement won't take effect until 40 deficiencies with the stadium are fixed. The city maintains that an independent certifier says the stadium is substantially complete, even though about 100 deficiencies remain.

The city and the team issued a joint statement last week about the stadium, saying that the two sides had reached a temporary rental agreement. The temporary agreement said that the Ticats will pay $700,000 in rent for the rest of 2015, and $1.4 million for the next 20 years, as per the rental agreement signed last year.

City spokesperson Mike Kirkopouloswouldn't say whether that varies now. He onlysaid council has "given direction" to staff around the issue.

"We have been given council direction and will likely be having further conversations with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats," he said.

The stadium has been a contentious issue over the past year.The original completion deadline was June 30, 2014, but the company Infrastructure Ontario (IO) hired to build the stadium,Ontario Sports Solutions (ONSS),didn't finish it enough to hand it overuntil May 2015.

The city and the CFL team are planning legal action against ONSS. They won't be the first. The subcontractor Lancaster Group is suing for $1.84 million, saying ONSSmismanaged the project and used some defective steel.

Negotiating the20-year leaseagreement between the city andTicatswas also contentious, squeaking through with a 9-7 council votelast year. Thatagreement was the result of years of negotiations.