Penticton Herald

Penticton needs the arts

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Dear Editor: The apparent conflict over use of the old Nanaimo Hall site is unnecessar­y, and the inflammato­ry rhetoric it has generated is disappoint­ing. Penticton badly needs both a youth drop-in centre and a creative and performing arts facility and this site is not big enough for them both.

As a Rotarian, I am acutely aware of the need for youth resources in Penticton, and I am proud of my Club’s leadership in supporting youth resource center initiative. It is not a matter of whether we need it but where.

At the same time, as one who has long respected and promoted the role of the performing arts in the making of a sustainabl­e city, I see Penticton as seriously lacking in the infrastruc­ture necessary to support and develop the performing arts. They are an essential element in a creative and liveable City. And it is creative, liveable cities that will win in today’s challengin­g economic climate. These are the cities that will successful­ly attract the kind of entreprene­urial businesses in the technology sector that will boost the average income of our citizens. We are now overly dependent on a tourism sector that provides mainly service-level jobs that are often only part-time.

Penticton is long overdue in supporting the arts as an economic driver. With encouragem­ent from previous Councils, SOPAC has worked hard to develop a viable plan for a purpose-built creative and performing arts facility at the old Nanaimo Hall site.

It is envisaged as an anchor facility in the developmen­t of a cultural corridor that will greatly enhance the livability and attractive­ness of our downtown district.

It will be one important step toward increasing the traffic that is essential to making our downtown sustainabl­e. In short, to use a metaphor, the shoe is a perfect fit for the foot.

A lot of work went into early studies for this facility, and there is really no other location that will enable it to do its job.

So, I strongly encourage all of us to stop making this into an “either/or” conflict with a winner and a loser.

Both projects can be winners, and I urge the organizers for the youth centre to work with the city to find an alternate site that still works for our youth. Gerry Karr Penticton

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