Medicine Hat News

Rec-centre closures could rehash multi-plex plan

- COLLIN GALLANT cgallant@medicineha­tnews.com Twitter: CollinGall­ant

Discussion­s to close cityrun recreation centres could revive a long-standing but never publicly discussed plan to build a multi-plex in the Box Springs Business Park.

Several Medicine Hat city council members discussed the benefits of consolidat­ing new modern facilities to replace aging arenas and recreation centres this week as a way to cut costs and meet challenges in an upcoming budget update.

Albert Stark, head of the ownership group at the Box Springs Park, said that is in line with what his group first proposed in 2012 and have more recently been lobbying for.

“We believe a (multi-plex) make sense, and it makes a lot of sense at Box Springs,” he said, citing city council’s goals of boosting sports tourism and developmen­t.

A four-rink facility near hotels and the city-run large spectator arena Co-op Place (formerly the Canalta Centre), could bring in a spate of new events, said Stark.

“We’ve been working on it, and for the last year more aggressive­ly, but it’s at the conceptual stage right now.”

Stark also said a larger plan for what’s long been billed an “events district” in the park near the large rink, could be outlined for the public this winter.

City officials didn’t specifical­ly discuss the BSBP proposal at Monday night’s council meeting, where Mayor Ted Clugston talked at length about the need to re-examine aging recreation facilities in terms of costs.

The Moose Recreation Centre on the Southeast Hill, he said, is in need of $1.2-million replacemen­t of the ice slab — upgrades that have been paused since 2018.

Another community rink of the same vintage, the Hockey Hounds Arena in Crescent

Heights, is due for a $1.5-million “modernizat­ion” in 2024, according to the long-term capital projects list.

“The Moose requires a fair bit of work for the ice slab, so we’ll see,” said Clugston, who also talked about changes to the Municipal Developmen­t Plan, passed this fall, that call for more centralize­d, rather than community facilities.

“At first people may say ‘no way’... but in a city the size of Medicine Hat ... people will drive to facilities and there are efficienci­es ... that far outweigh having a facility in every neighbourh­ood.”

A potential multi-plex was first discussed in 2012 when councillor­s approved removing a second ice surface from the Family Leisure Centre expansion, partly due to budget constraint­s on the $36-million project, but also due to a vaguely described private sector multi-plex proposal.

A study five years ago of ice availabili­ty in the Hat stated older rinks are less efficient in terms of collecting revenue to cover operationa­l costs, but the city’s two oldest rinks also cost less in actual dollars spent.

This week, most council members said belt tightening is needed ahead of budgeting, while the News also revealed that administra­tors are evaluating plans to reverse a 4 per cent tax hike.

As well this month, the city, Redcliff and Cypress County also signed a regional inter collaborat­ion framework that has co-ordinating recreation spending as a top priority.

“We’re looking at every single area of our operations and evaluating what the future will look like,” said Coun. Julie Friesen, who sat on the collaborat­ion committee and chairs the city’s public services committee that includes recreation. “We have some aging facilities that sooner rather than later we’ll have to have major money put into them.

“We’re also working with Cypress County and Redcliff about (collaborat­ing more), and recreation is on the table there, too.”

Last year, Cypress County evaluated a partnershi­p with the Prairie Rose School Division about building a new rink in Dunmore before pausing the project. A new recreation master plan is before county council this month, and a new “Intermunic­ipal Collaborat­ion Committee” of the three municipali­ties was just struck to discuss potential co-ordination and cost-sharing of joint-benefit projects.

“Is this something where there is something we can work together on?” Friesen said, speaking generally. “Maybe, maybe not. If it doesn’t work, then we won’t do it.”

 ?? NEWS PHOTO COLLIN GALLANT ?? Aging facilities, like the Moose Recreation Centre on the Southeast Hill, could be the focus of costing reviews and replacemen­t plans this fall as city budget officials seek to cut spending, the News has learned.
NEWS PHOTO COLLIN GALLANT Aging facilities, like the Moose Recreation Centre on the Southeast Hill, could be the focus of costing reviews and replacemen­t plans this fall as city budget officials seek to cut spending, the News has learned.
 ??  ?? Albert Stark
Albert Stark

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