City has thwarted Fredericton Exhibition efforts, former councillor says - Action News
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New Brunswick

City has thwarted Fredericton Exhibition efforts, former councillor says

City hall must take off its blinders about the Fredericton Exhibition and work with the group so both city and exhibition can grow, a former councillor says.

A former city councillor says Fredericton needs to do more to protect the summer exhibition

A sign showing the name of the NB Ex.
The City of Fredericton wants to turn the Fredericton Exhibition grounds over to housing development. (Maria Jose Burgos/CBC News)

City hall must take off its blinders about the Fredericton Exhibition and work with the group so both city and Ex can grow, a former councillor says.

This week, council decided to try pushingthe Fredericton Exhibition off the exhibition grounds onSmytheStreet and intoanother location

Although the Fredericton Exhibition says a move would kill the annual event,councillorsvoted Monday to start formal discussions to free the land for development.

'I know whatcouncillorstend to be more supportive of theFrexand the ones that weren't.'-MarilynKerton, former city councillor

"The blockage is coming from the city," said MarilynKerton, a city councillor for 24 years and a former board member of the exhibition, also known as the Frex, NB Ex and the Ex.

"Thecity, they have blinders on."

She said it seems that councillors from thesouth side of the city want the exhibition grounds for housing development, while north sidecouncillorsare more receptive to working with exhibition and helping its develop.

"I know whatcouncillorstend to be more supportive of theFrexand the ones that weren't," she said. "Mayor Mike O'Brien, when he was a councillor, he used to support quite a few of the activities that were presented to council."

Urges city to do more

Former city councillor Marilyn Kerton says the city has blocked the Fredericton Exhibition's efforts to make greater use of the site on Smythe Street. (CBC News)

The city owns the land but Fredericton Exhibition Ltd. has been leasing the property since 1948. The lease runs in 21-year terms, and at least 16 years remain on the current one.

In the last five years, O'Brien said, 600 apartments were built in the downtown core.A new residential area along Smythe could house up to 1,000 people.

O'Brien suggestedthe exhibition couldmove to the Grant-Harvey Centre in Knowledge Park, but an exhibition official said that wouldn't work.

Mike Vokey, the executive director of Fredericton Exhibition Ltd., said 500,000 people visit the exhibition grounds every year for the more than 50 events that happen there.

The city owns the land, but Fredericton Exhibition Ltd. has a lease and there are at least 16 years left on it. (Maria Jose Burgos/CBC News)

Anew location wouldbe a death sentence for the summer exhibition and other events, he said.

AlthoughKertonsaid she understands the city's desire for more residential space in the downtown area, the city has to do more for the exhibition. If it did, the exhibition wouldgrow, along with housing in the periphery of the grounds.

"Work together with theFrex," she said. "They're going to be there, they're going to be there forever and a day."

Ex has proposed improvements

As a councillor, she remembers the many effortsVokeymade to make theFredericton Exhibitionsite more viable and profitable, only to have the city turn them down.

"If the city would start working with Mike it's a win-win for both of them," saidKerton.

The debate about moving the exhibition was sparkeda few weeks ago, when citycouncillorsturned down retired boxer Brandon Brewer's pitch for a wellness centre on the exhibition grounds.

"I think the city could've worked with him and put his operation in there," she said. "He's a world-class boxer, and Ithink we missed the boat on that."