We
loaded up the minivan and took a family vacation a couple of weeks ago to visit
some of my wife’s family in Ontario. While we were there, we spent a day in
Niagara Falls and another day puttering around downtown Toronto. We got to see
the amazing Ripley’s Aquarium, took some touristy photos with the kids staring
slack-jawed at the biggest buildings they had ever seen, and I got an
unexpected history lesson from a hot dog vendor on the stadium that sits mere
feet away from the CN Tower – the building once known as the SkyDome.
Back in the 1980’s, a group of investors suggested that they could build an architectural
masterpiece in Toronto that would be the envy of cities the world over. It would be the “world’s greatest
entertainment center” – the SkyDome, with an original price of $125 million quoted
to the residents of Toronto. Trevor Eyton, the businessman heading up the
project, assured that the SkyDome could be built with very little public
funding. To say he was wrong would be an understatement, as the final price tag
for the completed venue came in just shy of $600 million, with taxpayers on the
hook for at least half of the total cost.
On June 3, 1989, the SkyDome was opened to the world. If you were to believe
the hype, Toronto had a license to print money! For a while it looked like the
huge gamble was going to pay off, with the Toronto Blue Jays – the SkyDome’s
highest profile tenant – pulling in over four million fans alone each year, and
many marquee entertainment events being held there to packed houses. For a
while, the SkyDome was the place to be and the astronomical price tag attached
to it started to look like mere pocket change when one regarded the potential
for future profit.
That’s when things started to go south. Blue Jays attendance dwindled, big
concerts started to go elsewhere, and the venue started losing money at an
alarming rate. It lost so much money that in 1993, the provincial government
that heavily subsidized the concrete monolith sold it to a private company for
$150 million; a company headed by none other than Trevor Eyton. A mere six
years later it was sold through bankruptcy proceedings for $80 million. In
2004, Ted Rogers snapped it up for an unbelievable $25 million – roughly four
percent of the original cost to build the venue – and stuck his name on the
side.
To recap, an entertainment venue that was partly built as a home for the
Toronto Blue Jays was heavily funded by public dollars. In roughly fifteen
years, the venue fell into the hands of the ridiculously wealthy owner of the
Blue Jays for a mind-numbing fraction of the cost that the taxpayers who paid
for it were originally saddled with.
This, dear readers, is how the rich get richer.
Sure, the SkyDome (I refuse to call it the Rogers Centre) is still a pretty
cool place to visit. It’s a decent place to watch a ball game on a June evening
with the roof opened and the CN Tower stretched overhead. I caught a football game there a few years
back and it was home to one of the greatest WrestleMania events of all time. If
I was the one footing the bill for it, though, by way of increased taxes and
funds diverted from more important things like health and education, I’d be
less than happy.
The fellow I talked to was of the firm belief that there was a hard lesson to
be learned with the SkyDome’s failure – entertainment venues should never be
built with public money. They should be funded by private enterprise; the ones
who preach how profitable these meccas will be before the costs start soaring
to astronomical levels on the backs of Jane and John taxpayer. I’d have to say
I agree with him.
Imagine how I felt when I I came home
and saw that Moncton city council approved a motion to borrow $95 million to
build the new Events Center on Main Street.
At a time where teachers are being cut, our hospitals are overcrowded
and understaffed, and the province is in the worst financial shape it’s been in
since I moved here ten years ago, we’re building a new stadium?
I can’t be happy about this. As much as I like seeing top notch entertainment in
a great venue, the fact of the matter is that this is the equivalent of me
going out and buying a brand new Cadillac when my kids don’t have clothes on
their backs or food in their bellies. The assurances that this building will be
a ‘money making venture’ and will bring untold riches and new life to the
downtown core don’t compute. Knowing the history of the SkyDome debacle certainly doesn’t instill faith in
council’s promise that they ‘won’t spend the whole $95 million’ they’re asking
to borrow either.
I ask the same question my hot dog peddling pal asked me – “if these things are
the goldmines they claim they are, why aren’t the fat cats getting in on the
ground floor and spending their own money on them? It’s always the people like
you and me that pay for these playgrounds!” Why can a guy selling wieners for a
living see this while our politicians fail to?
What can you do, though? My voice is lost in the storm of the people pushing
this through. I will say one thing, though. If I’m paying for this, I at least
want a retractable roof with a breathtaking view of the Bell Aliant Tower.
I'm not surprised this never made it to the T&T....Oh it's Earle, great read as usual. I have to touch on this though....
ReplyDelete"this is the equivalent of me going out and buying a brand new Cadillac when my kids don’t have clothes on their backs or food in their bellies."
Would it surprise you to read that I know someone who went out and bought a new quad cab Dodge 4X4 while his wife and kids were home with no power in their house? I shit you not.
Sadly, it would not.
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