The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Upgrades coming

Nine P.E.I. projects receive more than $11.5 million from taxpayers

- ERIC MCCARTHY eric.mccarthy@journalpio­neer.com

O’LEARY – There’s no fooling about it: April 1 will always be an important date in Hockeyvill­e, P.E.I.

On April 1, 2017, the Town of O’Leary learned it had won the national title as Kraft Hockeyvill­e.

Today, more than two years later, the $100,000 prize that accompanie­d that title has served as the catalyst for a $1.7 million renovation project at the O’Leary Community Sports Centre. Work is expected to commence on April 1, 2020.

Nearly two and a half years after the Hockeyvill­e Cup was presented, a building committee is preparing for the start of a major renovation project at the O’Leary Community Sports Centre. Funding for what is called the Hockeyvill­e Legacy Project totals $1,181,568 while the sports centre will kick in $518,430, including its Hockeyvill­e winnings.

Dean Getson chairs the renovation­s committee. He is also a member of the so-called “Fab Five”, the core group of community volunteers who headed up O’Leary’s Hockeyvill­e submission.

“We still get goosebumps when we hear (Egmont MP) Bobby (Morrissey) and (P.E.I. Social Developmen­t and Housing Minister) Ernie (Hudson) talk about April 1 and the announceme­nt,” Getson said.

Morrissey and Hudson were

in O’Leary on Thursday to announce federal and provincial funding for nine projects in Prince County, including the Hockeyvill­e Legacy project.

“Who could forget the enthusiasm and the pride that was brought on, first this community, then West Prince, then Prince County and all of P.E.I, and it became a Maritime initiative with the famous Kraft Hockeyvill­e

initiative that put O’Leary in the national spotlight, and that is a community effort,” said Morrissey

He commended the volunteer efforts that helped make all of Thursday’s funding announceme­nts a reality. Rinks in Alberton and Tyne Valley also received infrastruc­ture funding.

“Take the rinks out of smalltown rural Canada, rural P.E.I., where would we be?” Morrissey asked.

Hockeyvill­e, Getson said, “is still synonymous with O’Leary. You mention O’Leary and people think Hockeyvill­e.”

He marvels at how much pride the campaign and, ultimately, winning the Hockeyvill­e title has meant to O’Leary and Prince Edward Island.

“My favourite comment is, someone put on Facebook:’ Is it just me, or is everyone from O’Leary, P.E.I.?’”

He noted the O’Leary Hockeyvill­e Facebook page had 25,000 members from across P.E.I., across Canada and overseas.

“Some, I think, were just from rural Canada, cheering for the little guy.”

Getson said the suggestion to the renovation committee is to “think big” in its planning rather than returning to the table in three years looking for funding for another project.

He said the sports centre’s portion of the project is made up of its $100,000 Hockeyvill­e prize, about $30,000 in spinoffs from Hockeyvill­e activities. The Town of O’Leary contribute­d $15,000 and $60,000 came from a capital fund the sports centre had establishe­d. They hope to come up with the rest of the facility’s share through capital campaign, which will be launched soon, and a corporate sponsorshi­p campaign.

When the prize was awarded, the arena was looking primarily at overhaulin­g its foyer and canteen area but the project has morphed into much more.

The lobby, canteen and washrooms are still very much a part of the project, but Getson said the ice plant room has become a key component. The ammonia chiller will be replaced with new equipment and an NHLendorse­d safer coolant. That system and a heat recovery system should provide energy savings going forward, Getson said.

Other components of the project are the complete overhaul of the washrooms, LED lighting, new scoreboard­s and resurfacin­g of the parking lot. A persistent problem with water gathering near the main entrance will also be rectified.

Getson feels the project helps demonstrat­e what Hockeyvill­e has meant, and will mean, to O’Leary.

“First and foremost, it means that our kids, and their kids. will have, hopefully, another 30 years, three decades, to go without any major upgrades to the arena.”

 ?? ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Members of O’Leary’s Hockeyvill­e committee, from left, Dean Getson, Joanne Wallace, Tammy Rix and Della Sweet, welcome the more than $1 million in taxpayer funding for upgrades to the O’Leary Community Sports Centre.
ERIC MCCARTHY/JOURNAL PIONEER Members of O’Leary’s Hockeyvill­e committee, from left, Dean Getson, Joanne Wallace, Tammy Rix and Della Sweet, welcome the more than $1 million in taxpayer funding for upgrades to the O’Leary Community Sports Centre.

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