Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Worldclass skating rink in Dehradun facing meltdown

Facility is hardly used and ~30,000 is needed daily for maintenanc­e and other operationa­l costs

- Neha Pant neha.pant@htlive.com

DEHRADUN: Constructe­d at a cost of over ~100 crore, the ice skating rink here – the only internatio­nal-sized facility in the country – is in a state of disuse since its inaugurati­on six years ago. Though it began functionin­g in 2011, the facility has been shut, thanks to the high maintenanc­e cost which the Uttarakhan­d government is unable to bear.

The facility houses an Olympic-sized rink with a seating capacity of over 2,500. After its launch with the South Asian Winter Games in January 2011, the other event hosted by it was the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) Challenge Cup of Asia in March 2012, and two local ice skating and training events.

Shut since then, sources said the state government could not afford the expenditur­e required for keeping the arena functional – over ~30,000 daily on electricit­y, in addition to maintenanc­e of high-cost machines, roping in technical experts, trained staff and other operationa­l costs.

In 2015, the union sports ministry had assured Parliament that it would help restart the rink but that is yet to happen.

“As the rink is not operationa­l, Indian ice hockey and skating players are forced to train abroad (for short, costly stints) or at commercial rinks (in Gurgaon and Mumbai) which are not of internatio­nal size,” Shiv Painuly, president of the Ice Skating Associatio­n of Uttarakhan­d, told Hindustan Times.

He said the state has six internatio­nal and 45 national-level awards in ice skating “without any facility to train”. “Imagine how our medal count would soar with athletes getting to practice here.”

Experts say had it been maintained, the arena would have not only provided a much-needed platform to Indian ice sports athletes, and would have attracted a large number of domestic and internatio­nal tourists.

“With maintenanc­e and effective publicity, the state-of-theart rink would have put the state on the global map by attracting lovers of ice hockey and skating as well as tourists from all over the world,” said Arvind Gupta, secretary, Associatio­n of Roller Skating, Uttarakhan­d.

Painuly, who is also the chairperso­n of the Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Committee-Ice Rink of the Ice Skating Associatio­n of India, said the panel had approached the state government to restart operations. “Besides making urgent efforts, the state government should also pursue the matter with the Central government to save the asset from getting wasted,” he said.

When contacted, Neeraj Gupta, chief operating officer of the Rajiv Gandhi Sports Complex Society (a society under the Uttarakhan­d government which was given the mandate to manage the rink), said efforts were being made to revive the rink on a public-private partnershi­p mode. “We had invited bids from private players for running the facility earlier this year, but only a single bid was received. We’ll be calling for tenders again so that the rink can be made functional,” Gupta said.

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 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Since its launch in 2011, the rink in the Uttarakhan­d capital has hosted only a couple of highprofil­e events.
HT PHOTO Since its launch in 2011, the rink in the Uttarakhan­d capital has hosted only a couple of highprofil­e events.
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