The Peterborough Examiner

Halifax CFL team an ‘exciting opportunit­y’

- ALY THOMSON and BRETT BUNDALE THE CANADIAN PRESS

Halifax Mayor Mike Savage says bringing a Canadian Football League franchise to the city is an “exciting opportunit­y,” but the municipali­ty will not be leading the charge.

The CFL confirmed Thursday it has had talks with a group looking to secure an expansion franchise for Halifax.

Savage said there has been alongstand­ing interest in the city for a football franchise and stadium — Halifax currently does not have one suitable for a CFL team.

“My consistent response has been that a stadium is not a capital priority at this time,” said Savage in a statement. “Any proposal would need to be private-sector-led and make economic sense for the municipali­ty .”

Savage added that while the project is not yet at the decision stage, it “could bean exciting opportunit­y for the Halifax region .”

The league said in a statement there have been discussion­s with a group interested in securing a franchise for Halifax, but the talks are preliminar­y.

“While this group has been profession­al, enthusiast­ic and impressive, these conversati­ons are relatively new and a very thorough process of due diligence must be put in place and completed before we can fully assess the viability of the project,” it said.

A league officials aida timetable for potentiall­y awarding a franchise has not yet been establishe­d.

TSN reported Thursday the group made a presentati­on to the league’s board of governors several weeks ago in Toronto. The report also identified Anthony LeBlanc, a former president and CEO of the NHL’s Arizona Coyotes, as a partner in the group.

A franchise in the M ari times would give the league a coast-to-coast reach and would also allow it to form two five-team-divisions.

The CFL awarded a conditiona­l franchise to Halifax in 1982 — it was named the Atlantic Schooners—but financing for a stadium never came about. The league played regular-sea- son games in Mon ct on, N. B ., in 2010, 2011and’13.

In 2014, city staff presented Halifax council’ s committee of the whole with several potential large-scale capital projects for the municipali­ty, such as a performing arts centre, multi-pad arena sand a stadium.

The presentati­on noted a desire for a multi-use stadium in Halifax, and that the city is “now large enough to support a stadium.”

Municipal staff pegged the cost of a stadium at $60 million, and noted the need to cost-share with the private sector and other levels of government.

Halifax council later discussed Shannon Park, an abandoned military enclave on the Dartmouth side of Halifax harbour, as a site for a potential stadium.

Around that time, Savage toured Ottawa’s redevelope­d Lansdowne Park, which includes a 24,000seat sporting arena, TD Place Stadium.

The redesign of the park at the southern edge of the Glebe neighbourh­ood, which included retail space, condominiu­ms, and a children’ s play structure along with the stadium, was critical to securing the Ottawa Redblacks franchise.

The public-private partnershi­p was a model Savage called “attractive” at the time.

In 2015, however, council shelved the idea of a stadium, instead opting to focus on parks, recreation facilities and affordable housing.

The population of Halifax was about 403,000 in 2016, according to Statistics Canada. By comparison, Regina — home of the CFL’s Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s — had a population of around 214,000 in 2016.

Earlier this year, the city came closer to capturing a new FIFA-sanctioned profession­al soccer franchise after city councillor­s unanimousl­y signed off on a pop-up stadium at a downtown municipal sports field. Sports Entertainm­ent Atlantic pitched the temporary soccer facility in a bid to earn a team in the Canadian Premier League. The team’s home field would be at the Wanderers Grounds, a four-hectare natural turf sports field on the HalifaxCom­mons.

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