Feasibility of new Charlottetown sports, entertainment complex reviewed - Action News
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Feasibility of new Charlottetown sports, entertainment complex reviewed

A task force to look into the feasibility of establishing a new multi-use sport and entertainment facility in Charlottetown has been appointed by city council.

Group will create succession plan for aging facilities for city council to review

Charlottetown Mayor Clifford Lee says it is getting expensive to maintain three aging ice pads in the city. (Michael O'Drowsky/CBC)

A task force to look into the feasibility of establishing a new multi-usesport and entertainment facility in Charlottetown has been appointed by city council.

The Charlottetown Multi-Use Facility Project Exploratory Taskforce will also create a succession plan for aging facilities for city council to review.

'I don't believe that the $1.5 million we're spending now on those other three ice pads is a wise investment."- Clifford Lee

The taskforce will examine marketplace and community needs, deficiencies in sport and entertainment capacity, and the operational costs of current facilities as they age. The group will look for partnership opportunitiesand ways to establish afacility that is competitive in the entertainment industry, while supporting existing and extended community recreational programming, said the city.

Charlottetown Mayor Clifford Lee stresses the city hasn't agreed to build anything, but wants to knowwhat capital costs would be to build a new complexand the operational expensesgoing forward.

Lee said the city is currentlysubsidisingSimmons Arena,CoadyBanks Arena and theEastlinkCentreto the tune of $1.5 million per year.He said the Eastlink Centre is 20-something years old and the other two buildings are older and their life spans arecoming to an end.

'Does it make sense?'

"Let's look at all the options out there before we go out and start to replace smaller facilities," said Lee.

"Does it make sense to build one facility with three ice pads?"

Lee said the city needs to createbusiness plan that makes financial sense.

"Quite frankly I don't believe that the $1.5 million we're spending now on those other three ice pads is a wise investment and I don't think it's sustainable long-term," said Lee.

As thebuildings age, he said,the expenses will continue to grow.

The members of the taskforceare:

  • Mike Hennessey.
  • Brian Cameron.
  • Spencer Campbell.
  • Dennis King.
  • Barb Stevenson.
  • Mitchell Tweel.
  • BerniWood.

They are all unpaid volunteers.

There is a budget of $100,000 for the task force for expenses such as accountants, engineers, drawing upplans, and possible travel to see other facilities.

Report timeline

Coun. Kevin Ramsay said after the council meeting on Monday that there was no timeline for a report from the task force. On Tuesday, in an interview with CBC News: Compass host Bruce Rainnie, Lee saidhe now expectsto see a report from the task force in one year.

"Thistaskforcewill build on work that was done in the past and look at the big picture. It just doesn't make sense to proceed with only part of the information. We need to take all factors into account before we move forward,"saidCoun.KevinRamsay, chair of the advanced planning, priorities and special projects committee.

Ramsay said the City of Charlottetown probably couldn't establish a new facility on its own and other levels of government money would be needed as well.