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January 10, 2003
Task force to decide future
of old arena
Residents asked to brainstorm
ideas for financing Arnaitok Ipeelee Arena
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
At
a public meeting last February, eight-year-old Paulusi Davidee urged Iqaluit
East MLA Ed Picco to help save the Arnaitok Arena.
(FILE PHOTO)
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DENISE
RIDEOUT
Iqaluit city council wants
to bring together a group of residents who use the citys two arenas to
brainstorm ways to keep both facilities open.
In the next few months,
city council will launch the "arena task force," a committee of arena users.
The task force will be made up of at least one city councillor and up to six
community members.
Their goal will be to come
up with innovative ways to keep the two hockey rinks running.
The city is currently paying
to operate the Arnaitok Ipeelee Arena, a 30-year-old facility located downtown,
and the Arctic Winter Games Complex, which was built last year on the Road to
Apex.
In the citys 2003
budget, which was passed on Dec. 15, city council committed to spend $300,000
to operate the Arnaitok Ipeelee Arena this year.
For the following years,
city council will put $200,000 a year into the arena and it will be up to sports
groups, residents and local business to come up with the remaining $100,000
each year to pay for its day-to-day operating costs.
"People app-eared to be
favorable to the idea of some type of joint funding arrangement whereby the
city pays some and then the community user groups step forward and pay a chunk
as well," Iqaluit Mayor John Matthews said in an interview.
"Thats what were
hoping will happen."
The newly formed arena
task force will bat around ideas about how sports groups and businesses can
raise the $100,000 they need.
"This is a group that can
work together," Matthews said. "The city will be a part of it, but it will have
volunteers from the minor hockey association who can obviously add some direction
to it."
Ever since a new arena
was built for the 2002 Arctic Winter Games, city council has known that it cant
afford to operate both rinks.
The city was paying out
$300,000 to run the Arnaitok arena on a yearly basis.
Traditionally, the arenas
users, mainly hockey teams and skaters, paid about $45,000 a year in user fees.
But most of those users
moved to the new, NHL-size arena when it was built, leaving the Arnaitok rink
with just $30,000 a year in revenue.
City council told Iqaluit
residents that paying for two arenas was putting pressure on its already strained
budget. If Arnaitok was shut down, city council said, the $270,000 it would
save annually could be put toward a new swimming pool or running a public transit
system.
City council also said
the two arenas were not being used to their capacity. When the second rink was
opened, the total available ice time increased by 80 per cent, but the number
of users went up only 20 per cent. City council asked residents if it made sense
to run two facilities for the mere 400 people who were using them regularly.
But during a public meeting
in July, hockey players, coaches and skaters begged city council not to shut
down Iqaluits oldest arena. They said it didnt make sense to close
a recreational facility when Iqaluits population is growing such a high
rate.
Residents also said the
Arnaitok Arena serves the downtown area, while the Arctic Winter Games Complex
caters to people living in Apex and the eastern part of Iqaluit.
After making their emotional
pleas, arena users got what they asked for. City council agreed to keep Arnaitok
open for one more year and then turn to the community to help finance the old
rink.
The idea to create the
arena task force came out of that public meeting.
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