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PEI

North Rustico turns to P.E.I. government to help cover millions in rink debt

The Town of North Rustico is trying to get a loan of up to $3.5 million from the P.E.I. government to help pay off some of the debt associated with its rink, which was built to help host the Canada Games.

Centre was supposed to cost $10 million but that price tag has more than doubled

Hockey players skate on a large indoor rink.
The rink at the Eliyahu Wellness Centre is being used, but work still needs to be done at the facility. The arena served as the venue for figure skating and short-track speed skating during the 2023 Canada Games. (Ken Linton/CBC)

The Town of North Rustico is trying to get a loan of up to $3.5 million from the P.E.I. government to help pay off some of the debt associated with its rink, which was built to help host the Canada Games.

The centre was supposed to cost $10 million but that price tag has more than doubled to about $23 million.

During a special meeting Thursday morning, town councillors agreed to apply for the loan to service various debts, pay legal bills in a case a creditor brought against the town, and fund the rest of the construction needed to complete work on the Eliyahu Wellness Centre at Canada Games Place.

"I'm really sorry that this happened, but it did happen, and we're trying to deal with it, find a solution to it," said Mayor Heather McKenna. "They're working on it. I knowwe've been working on it for the last year and a half, trying to get it resolved."

An old woman with redish hair looks off camera with a blank face.
North Rustico Mayor Heather McKenna says COVID-19, supply-chain issues, and a labour shortage contributed to the skyrocking cost of the Eliyahu Wellness Centre. (Ken Linton/CBC)

The centre was used as a prominent venue during the Canada Winter Games in 2023, and now hosts a hockey school.

CBC News confirmed last year that $2.5 million in liens had been registered against the town for unpaid bills one for more than $1 million.

At that point, about $400,000 in work still needed to be done to install ventilation systems, complete the kitchen and canteen, address outside drainage concerns, and finish landscaping.

"It doubled because of COVID, labour, supply chain, prices went upit happened everywhere," said McKenna. "It's not like it didn't happen to any other town or communities or cities. We just happened to be the unlucky ones."

A photo taken from a drone shows a new rink, blue metal in the front, grey metal in the back. In the background is the nearby harbour.
The Eliyahu Wellness Centre has an Olympic-size ice surface, 10 dressing rooms, a fitness centre, and a campus for a private sports academy. But it still needs work. (Shane Hennessey/CBC)

The town of about 650 people on P.E.I.'s North Shore has been working with the province and a private consultant to try and figure out what went wrong. Stephanie Moase, the town's chief administrative officer, said that work is getting somewhere.

"I feel that we are turning a corner," said Moase. "I feel more comfortable every day that we're getting a handlenot only [on] what happened during the project, but [on] where we are heading next."

North Rustico has already taken out a bank loan worth $3.4 million to fund construction of the wellness centre, part of about $5 million in debt the town is currently carrying.

'The town needs it to move forward'

Under P.E.I.'s Municipal Government Act, municipalities can't borrow money for capital construction if their debt would 10 per cent or more of their totalassessed property values.

For North Rustico, that cap kicks in at about $10 million. The new loan would take them up to $8.5 million, if it's approved by the province.

In talks with Finance P.E.I., the town hopes to negotiate to pay off the loan over the expected lifetime of the rink. A long amortization period like that"will assist us in being able to make these payments," said Moase.

A woman with medium-length blonde hair wears glasses and a black shirt while looking off camera.
Stephanie Moase, the CAO of North Rustico, says the town is eligible to borrow up to about $10.3 million, according to provincial legislation. (Ken Linton/CBC)

In a statement, a spokesperson for the province said there's a due-diligence process to evaluate each proposalfor its risk and any projected return.

"Once proposals are reviewed and approved, applicants would enter into a lending agreement with Finance P.E.I."

Moase said the town hopes the process can be completed as soon as possible. "Our new sports season is underway in about three weeks, so the rink is going to be full and it's a lot harder to do construction."

McKenna said she believes the town can afford to take on the additional debt, but acknowledged that council hasn't ruled out a tax increase in order to be able to do that.

"The town needs it to move forward," she said.

With files from Wayne Thibodeau