The Guardian (Charlottetown)

A top priority

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Memo to Charlottet­own’s multi-use facility task force: It will be a colossal disappoint­ment and waste of time unless your report unanimousl­y recommends the constructi­on of a new facility to replace the Eastlink Centre. If there’s anything else there, we don’t want to hear it.

The task force, appointed in the spring of 2016, is expected to deliver its report in two weeks. The group hopefully has arrived at the same conclusion that many Islanders reached years ago — the building needs replacemen­t, and the sooner the better.

“Big Blue” was a ghastly mistake in design when it opened some 27 years ago, a year before the 1991 Canada Winter Games. The Games were the main reason for its constructi­on and provided various options for funding.

A similar playbook is unfolding that can rectify the mistakes of the past and fund a modern arena with all the amenities that fans and patrons deserve. For too long, sports fans, music lovers and entertainm­ent production­s have suffered needlessly in a building constructe­d for horse shows and cattle auctions.

The roadmap to a new facility is clear. In September 2016, the province threw open the door by accepting an unconteste­d bid for the 2023 Canada Winter Games. When thousands of Canada’s most gifted young athletes gather on P.E.I. in a little over five years from now, a new facility should await them.

Frankly, we’re tired of limited vision, stopgap solutions and wasted opportunit­ies over the years. The civic centre is a good example but there are others. In our 2014 sesquicent­ennial year, P.E.I. dropped the ball on a permanent memorial for this Birthplace of Canada, opting for a series of minor province-wide celebratio­ns. Sure, the communitie­s appreciate­d the support at the time, but the benefits were gone from both memory and landscape shortly afterwards.

As this year winds to a close, the country’s socalled 150th birthday bash is about to conclude with a similar disappoint­ing finish. What did the Cradle of Confederat­ion get out of it, except for the start of long-overdue renovation­s to Province House? There was a lack of big-picture vision stretching from Ottawa into every provincial capital. What a wasted opportunit­y.

The city task force can salvage something from this year. Infrastruc­ture spending or other federal and provincial funding must support a facility that will benefit the city and province. Mayor Lee has understand­able concerns about debt and taxes but the city can’t sit on the sidelines and let others do all the heavy lifting. Corporatio­ns must come on board in support, starting with naming rights.

Summerside did it right when it had the chance. Former mayor Basil Stewart saw a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y to build something special and did it. The city hasn’t declared bankruptcy and is reaping the rewards of its vision every day.

Charlottet­own can do the same, starting in two weeks. The opportunit­y may not present itself again. It’s time the city takes a leap into the future.

A positive recommenda­tion for a 5,000-seat facility would be a welcome Christmas gift.

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