Councillors troubled by Lansdowne report - Action News
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Ottawa

Councillors troubled by Lansdowne report

Some councillors are troubled by a new report that recommends the Cityof Ottawa amend a complex, 30-year dealwithprivate partners at Lansdowne Park in order to keep the arrangementgoing.

OSEG owners want to contribute an extra $40M to cover COVID-19 losses, but ask for city flexibility

The north-side stands at Lansdowne and the arena under them were constructed in the 1960s. (Kate Porter/CBC)

Some councillors are troubled by a new report that recommends the Cityof Ottawa amend a complex, 30-year dealwithprivate partners at Lansdowne Park in order to keep the arrangementgoing.

Coun. Shawn Menard, who represents the Glebe, listed a number of questions he had arising from city staff's recommendations, which he was briefed on shortly before the report became public Wednesday evening.

"I am concerned about a short-sighted stop-gap measure created out of panic and without sufficient reflection, which could turn into a long-term liability for Ottawa," he said in a statement.

Ottawa Sports and Entertainment Group (OSEG) told CBC News that after almost seven years, the public-private partnership was on the verge of breaking even when COVID-19 hit, but now it estimates losses of $40 million over the coming five years.

The Ottawa Redblacks and Ottawa 67sand other teams OSEG owns aren't selling tickets to games at TD Place. Rent collection from the shops and restaurants that OSEG runs for the partnership was less than 50 per cent between April and September, according to city staff.

With a $106 million mortgage on the retail sector needing refinancingin a couple of years, city staff reported that OSEGmight find its best choice is todefault,leaving the municipalityresponsible for operating theentire site the stadium and arena, and commercial areas and spending millions a year to do so.

OSEG owners to inject$40M

But the notion of default came from city staff, not OSEG, said CEO Mark Goudie, who maintains OSEG owners Roger Greenberg, William Shenkman, John Pugh, and John Ruddy are local business leaders and want to see Lansdowne succeed.

"This is personal for them. I think they just want to know that if they're willing to step forward with another $40 million, which they're willing to do and want to do, that their partner in the city can show some flexibility," Goudie said.

OSEG approached the citytoask foraccess to the $4.7 million it has put intoareserve account for maintaining the parking garage and stadium, an extra decade on the deal to give them until 2054 to recoup losses, and to change the arrangement so that the city doesn't sharein the cash flowfrom retail rent until 2066.

Mark Goudie, president and CEO of the Ottawa Sports and Entertainment Group, as seen at Ottawa City Hall in April 2019. (Jean Delisle/CBC)

In the report, staff themselves write thatwhen it comes to Lansdowne'spotential risks and rewards, the partnership has become an imbalanced one. OSEGcurrently stands to have contributed $192 million in capitalrather than the $55 million expected in 2012.

"OSEG has been more expensive to the owners than they anticipated," said Goudie.

City staff say agreeing to the changes would mean less risk for the municipality, and OSEGwould continue to be responsible for covering operating deficits for an extra decade.

Public meeting Nov. 10

But Menard, who has raised concerns about potentialrisks of public-private partnerships in the past, doesn't see it that way and questions long-term changes to the complicated Lansdowne agreements.

"There is no way to guarantee that the proposal will keep OSEG solvent for more than a year, and no contingencies for what happens should we find ourselves in this exact same situationin the near future," he wrote.

He has planned a virtual community meeting for Nov. 10, two days before the report heads to finance and economic development committee on Nov. 12. Menard questions the timing, too, noting the auditor-general's review of Lansdowne's accounting and so-called "waterfall" agreement isto be presented at the end of the month, one day before council would agree to change the OSEG deal.

Other councillors also reacted to the surprise report, which goes far beyond the annual financial rundown,with skepticism.

Coun. Diane Deans said she never believed the Lansdowne redevelopment to have been in the city's best interests, and voted against it in2009.

"I am fully willing to admit COVID has been very hard on everyone and it has no doubt been hard on Lansdowne," said Deans. "But it is a pattern. This is not a one-off. This has been going on since the start of this partnership."

Last year, OSEG tried to take over the city-run urban park in a bid to boost visitors and revenues. While that plan was withdrawn, this current report would create a new working group betweencity staff and OSEGto consider how to make the site more viablepost-COVID-19, which could include looking at the aging north-side stadium stands.

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