The Chronicle

REVEALED: THE COST TO BRING THE NRL HERE

GAME ON THE WAY TO SELLING OUT

- TOM GILLESPIE

NO RATEPAYER cash was handed over to secure Toowoomba’s first NRL match in three years, the council says.

Mayor Paul Antonio has lifted the lid on the final negotiated amount, which comes to $21,500 in in-kind support from the council towards the event on Sunday.

The figure is largely made up of traffic controllin­g and waste management both before and after the game.

The investment could deliver a tenfold return for the region, with economic developmen­t experts putting the economic output of the match this weekend at over half a million dollars, not including the value of national exposure through broadcasti­ng.

Speaking at Tuesday’s ordinary meeting, Mr Antonio said the arrangemen­t reached was a big boost.

“I thank the NRL for their commitment to Toowoomba, and this could bring an enormous amount of economic developmen­t to our region,” he said.

“The other thing I have in mind is to try and get a yearly game to Toowoomba, which will not only drive economic developmen­t, but we know about the social benefits of sporting events like this.”

Deputy Mayor Geoff McDonald endorsed the comments, saying the match was the first step towards a longterm arrangemen­t that could deliver much-needed infrastruc­ture.

“I’m hopeful that this relationsh­ip that’s been built over the past six weeks will go towards a new stadium,” he said.

“Our region is prepared to do our little bit, and it is a little compared to what it could have been.”

Councillor­s like Megan O’Hara Sullivan and Nancy Sommerfiel­d highlighte­d that some residents held hesitation­s about the game going ahead amid the ongoing Covid-19 crisis. Mr Antonio said the match had been cleared by health authoritie­s.

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