The Hamilton Spectator

Taxpayers won’t be dinged in stadium settlement

More work still needed for problems at Tim Hortons Field

- MATTHEW VAN DONGEN

THE CITY SAYS more stadium repairs are coming following the settlement of a lawsuit over its problem-plagued $145-million stadium — but taxpayers aren’t on the hook for any extra costs.

The Spectator reported two weeks ago that the city, province and Hamilton Tiger-Cats had effectivel­y reached an agreement to end competing lawsuits worth tens of millions of dollars over Tim Hortons Field.

The formal settlement announceme­nt Thursday noted virtually all details will stay secret under the deal between the city, Ticats, Infrastruc­ture Ontario, Pan Am Games organizing committee and stadium contractor Ontario Sports Solutions.

But Mayor Fred Eisenberge­r emphasized taxpayers won’t be dinged for any extra costs due to the long-

running litigation, which started with duelling court claims in spring 2016. “As a result of the resolution, the city is on budget and has sufficient monies remaining to complete final works at the stadium,” he said.

Repairs that are still needed three years after the stadium opened include sealing ongoing expansion joint leaks, fixing floor drains, adding speakers to address complaints about sound dead zones, and installing taller guardrails along the top of some stands and stairs, said facilities head Rom D’Angelo.

The city expects some other minor leaks, which affect “non-public” areas under the stands, to be handled under a manufactur­er warranty, rather than by the city, he added.

The tenders for city repairs should go out in the next few weeks, D’Angelo said.

Since the stadium was handed over late and unfinished ahead of the 2015 Pan Am Games, the city has already stepped in to fix leaks, missing draft beer lines, unsafe railings and rain-damaged television screens. It also commission­ed a safety audit after a tower speaker plunged into empty stands in 2016.

The settlement also provides unspecifie­d compensati­on to the Tiger-Cats for losses due to constructi­on delays and other stadium deficienci­es.

In a statement, the Ticats said the team is satisfied with the settlement and happy to “turn the page” and work with the city on common goals like bringing a CFL Grey Cup football game and profession­al soccer to Hamilton.

Ticats CEO Scott Mitchell later told The Spectator he expects to have a “good, honest discussion” with the city about potential bid timelines for the CFL championsh­ip game and how “we make sure that it's a smashing success.” He did not rule out a possible bid as soon as 2020.

City councillor­s also cited the lawsuit last year in refusing to consider a teamsponso­red winter dome over the Tim Hortons Field playing surface.

Eisenberge­r said there is still a “difference of opinion” between the city and team over whether the Tiger-Cats have a valid lease to run a soccer franchise at Tim Hortons Field. (A new Canadian Premier League is supposed to start play next year, with Hamilton already listed online as a founding member playing out of Tim Hortons Field.)

Mitchell said he anticipate­s “some positive news” on the soccer situation in Hamilton in the coming weeks. He also confirmed the Ticats would revisit the stadium dome pitch with the goal of “turning Tim Hortons field into a twelve-month-ofthe-year community facility.”

The release does not specify what compensati­on was provided to either the city or Ticats.

The city originally filed a $35-million legal claim against Infrastruc­ture Ontario and the stadium contractor, including $14 million on behalf of the Ticats for losses due to constructi­on delays and other problems.

But at the same time, the city also claimed $4.5 million against the team for delays allegedly caused by the team. The Ticats filed a countercla­im against the city that listed more than 30 stadium defects and issues, but did not specify a particular dollar value.

Infrastruc­ture Ontario spokespers­on Lee Greenberg said in a statement the settlement “confirms the project was completed on budget.”

Council discussed the lawsuit behind closed doors weeks ago and emerged to vote on secret directions to staff. Councillor­s Terry Whitehead and Donna Skelly voted against the closed-door decision, but did not specify why.

Whitehead said he can’t talk about the details of the settlement, but specified Thursday his vote was against a “lack of transparen­cy,” not the settlement itself.

The cost of tendered repair work will eventually become public.

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