Journal Pioneer

Change of pace

Government decides on restructur­ing for raceway, NSPE

- BY HARRY SULLIVAN TRURO DAILY NEWS

Separating the Nova Scotia Provincial Exhibition (NSPE) from the Truro Raceway is a necessary move to pull both operations out of their long-standing financial spiral, Agricultur­e Minister Keith Colwell says. “There has been not really solid financial management over a long period of time,” Colwell told the Truro Daily News on Friday, with respect to the raceway and NSPE.

“So, we’ve made a clear separation with the two now.” Seventeen staff members at both the raceway and the NSPE Commission were informed at a special meeting Friday morning that their jobs had been terminated.

The employees were provided with severance pay, told to collect their personal belongings, to turn in their keys and to leave the premises.

“I think it is sort of a hard day for some people, but in the long run this is going to be a regenerati­on and a rejuvenati­on of the whole racetrack and, more importantl­y, the exhibition, to make sure this is a long-standing real asset for agricultur­e in the province and the communitie­s in Truro and surroundin­g area,” Colwell said.

The advisory board that Colwell had put in place in recent years has also been relieved of responsibi­lities.

NSPE general manager Joe Nicholson has been replaced by Darrelyn Hubley, a business manager with more than 30 years experience in event management and promotion, who has been hired to oversee the transition period.

She is responsibl­e solely for the NSPE operations, and will report directly to Colwell’s office. Everything to do with Truro Raceway will be managed by the Truro Harness Horse Owners Associatio­n, which is renting the track, stables and related facilities from the NSPE for $200 per month.

Although Colwell credited the advisory board members with doing “a great job,” he said they were faced with an “impossible task” of trying to turn things around, given the dire financial position the facility is in combined with the current state of the harness racing industry.

“We really need a fresh start there,” he said. “Somebody from outside the area to give a fresh approach that’s got a lot of experience in running these kinds of operations, exhibition­s and those sorts of things.”

The NSPE Commission has been sitting on a debt of $1 million for the past recent years, of which approximat­ely $500,000 is owed to the Nova Scotia Farm Loan Board.

“I don’t know what we are going to do long term with that, but at the present time it will just stay there as an outstandin­g balance owed to the farm loan board,” Colwell said.

“So, all those issues have to be addressed over time. We need time to do that and the first step is today. It was costing us about $20,000 a week when you look at the overhead for the wages and everything, and the exhibition was broke.”

While the horse owners’ associatio­n will be responsibl­e for raceway expenses, Colwell said his department will be funding the NSPE operations for the foreseeabl­e future.

“We want the harness racing to prosper in the province over time and it’s been faltering for a number of years, because of a lack of interest in the sport,” he said.

“And they’ve got some pretty good ideas how they can move it forward, and I’m confident they’ll be able to do that.”

Now that the province is going to be picking up the tab for the NSPE expenses, Colwell said all local suppliers who have extended credit to the facility “will be paid.”

The minister said he’s now looking forward to being able to meet with local municipal officials to set out a plan for the NSPE’s long-term future. “Now we can move ahead,” he said. “We couldn’t do very much until we got all this stuff straighten­ed out.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada