The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Legacy lives on

Cornwall sports facility bears Terry Fox’s name

- jason.malloy @theguardia­n.pe.ca Twitter.com/ sportsguar­dian JASON MALLOY

CORNWALL — Kent Lannan didn’t see the Marathon of Hope in person or have a close connection with cancer.

But he felt strongly about who should be recognized as Cornwall was preparing to open a jewel of a recreation facility a decade ago.

“We didn’t really have much on the Island, and still don’t, in honour of Terry Fox, so I thought that would be a fitting tribute to him and something the kids could look up to, when they used the facility, and remember him by and be inspired by,” Lannan said Thursday. “Just like most Canadians, I admired what he did and the reason he did it.”

Lannan, who chaired the parks and recreation committee at the time, came up with the idea and reached out to the Terry Fox Foundation to see if it might be a possibilit­y. He spoke with Terry’s brother, Fred, and then worked with recreation manager Kim Meunier to put a package together about the facility to show the family and explain the town’s plans.

“It was almost a no-brainer for the family,” Fred said. “For Terry and for our family, to know that there’s a sports facility named after Terry, he would be proud of that.”

Town council decided to name the facility the Terry Fox Sports Complex in June 2010, and the legend’s parents, Betty and Rolly Fox, were at the official ribbon-cutting ceremony at the adjoining Eliot River Elementary School on Sept. 18 that year. It is the same school Terry visited during his Marathon of Hope in 1980 as he crossed the country raising money for cancer research and awareness about the disease.

“He certainly made a contributi­on to the country, and I think our little province has done right by him by having a fabulous complex like we have named in his honour,” Lannan said. “I think it is something that the Town of Cornwall should be really proud of.”

It wasn’t a unanimous decision at the time as some people thought the facility should be named after someone local.

“I don't think there’s ever been a more universall­y loved person in Canada – everybody loved him,” said Patrick MacFadyen, who was the mayor when the facility opened.

There are statues of Fox in St. John’s, Ottawa, Thunder Bay, Ont., and in British Columbia, while 14 schools in Canada bear his name. There are 15 highways and roads named after Terry, including one in Charlottet­own by the provincial government buildings near Victoria Park, and one mountain in B.C.

“Probably the biggest tribute that Terry ever received, and he was still alive to experience it, (was winning) the Lou Marsh Award, the award for the top athlete in Canada,” Fred said. “What he was doing was an athletic endeavour – he was running a marathon every day.”

The facility began with soccer and football turf fields and walking paths in 2006. Phase 1 cost $1.7 million and was shared by the three levels of government.

The next phase would include the clubhouse, ball fields, basketball, tennis and beach volleyball courts, plus a toboggan hill and walking trails. As the town was planning for the additions, the economy collapsed in 2008.

The federal government then said it would cover up to 50 per cent of project costs for shovel-ready projects as a way to stimulate the economy. It meant the town’s traditiona­l 33 per cent cost for projects shared with the federal and provincial government­s would be reduced to 17 per cent. The town submitted the paperwork, and it was approved. The final price tag for Phase 2 was about $3 million with the town’s share in the $500,000 neighbourh­ood.

“The facility, I think, has turned out even better than we hoped. The use of the facility has been tremendous,” MacFadyen said.

“It’s a real sense of pride for the community.”

The town had proposed the parking lot between the baseball field and the Trans-Canada Highway. It was contentiou­s at the time because there was no access off the highway, meaning people had to go through a residentia­l area and the school parking lot to get to the facility’s parking lot.

“We’re long-term thinkers here,” MacFadyen said, noting the thought at the time was that “someday the bypass is coming and someday we’ll be able to get access off the highway.”

That happened earlier this year with the opening of the new bypass around Cornwall.

In a day and age where a lot of municipali­ties have sold naming rights to facility, Cornwall hasn’t for the wellused facility.

“There’s some things that money can’t buy,” Lannan said, adding he hopes the town retains the name to maintain the integrity of the complex.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The Terry Fox Sports Complex was officially opened during a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Sept. 18, 2010, at Eliot River Elementary School. From left are then Cornwall-Meadow Bank MLA Ron MacKinley, then mayor Patrick MacFadyen, Terry’s parents, Betty and Rolly Fox, then Egmont MP Gail Shea and then Cornwall parks and recreation committee chairman Kent Lannan.
CONTRIBUTE­D The Terry Fox Sports Complex was officially opened during a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Sept. 18, 2010, at Eliot River Elementary School. From left are then Cornwall-Meadow Bank MLA Ron MacKinley, then mayor Patrick MacFadyen, Terry’s parents, Betty and Rolly Fox, then Egmont MP Gail Shea and then Cornwall parks and recreation committee chairman Kent Lannan.
 ?? JASON MALLOY/THE GUARDIAN ?? Kent Lannan was a town councillor in Cornwall who suggested naming the Terry Fox Sports Complex after the Canadian legend.
JASON MALLOY/THE GUARDIAN Kent Lannan was a town councillor in Cornwall who suggested naming the Terry Fox Sports Complex after the Canadian legend.

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