Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Quebec could con us out of NHL team
They hold a huge political advantage
CLEVELAND -- So remember, way back when, that kerfuffle about how Winnipeg got hosed over that CF-18 maintenance contract, which ended up going to Quebec instead for what appeared to be purely political reasons?Remember how that became a huge thing all over Western Canada and was a big contributor to the whole Western Alienation thing?
Remember that?
Well, try this one on for size: The federal government is being asked to contribute $175 million to the construction of a new arena for Quebec City so that, essentially, the Quebec capital can be the next Canadian city to get an NHL hockey team instead of us.
Seriously.
Now, to put that request in outrageous context, consider this: The entire MTS Centre cost just $133 million to construct -- and just $14 million of that came from the federal government. And the feds whined about it, especially when they had to boost their contribution at the last minute from $13 million to $14 million. I kid you not.
Now, I don't care if you're a hockey fan or not, if you think the NHL is viable in Winnipeg or not, if you think there should be government money in sports arenas or not. Because whatever your position on those polarizing questions, if you hail from Manitoba you should pay close attention to what Quebec City Mayor Regis Labeaume told a news conference Friday.
And you should remember it whenever the next federal election comes.
Because if the governing Tories cave to Quebec -- and, let's face it, it certainly wouldn't be the first time, now would it? -- the people of Manitoba, hockey fans and not, will have gotten hosed in a way that will make the CF-18 fiasco look like a minor slight.
Taxpayer
Because there is no way Winnipeg will be able to compete for the seventh Canadian NHL team against what sounds like a taxpayer funded ice palace more than an arena, particularly with our tight-budget MTS Centre and a 15,000-seat capacity that many already perceive as too small to house an NHL team.
Mark Chipman, chairman of the group that owns the MTS Centre, refused a request for an interview on Friday, but I can assure you of one thing: Chipman, who's made no secret of his interest in acquiring an NHL tenant for his building, certainly took notice of what was going on in Quebec Friday.
Here's the deal: A week after he made headlines by meeting with NHL commissioner Gary Bettman and expressing his city's desires to return to the NHL fold 14 years after the Nordiques moved to Colorado, Labeaume told a news conference Friday morning that he wants a new $400-million arena to back a Quebec City bid for an NHL team.
Labeaume announced the city has already hired engineering firm SNC Lavalin to conduct a feasibility study and would like to see the arena completed by 2012.
And that small mattwer of money? Labeaume -- who, not coincidentally, is presently running for re-election -- says Quebec City will contribute $50 million, while he'll be expecting the province of Quebec and the federal government to contribute $175 million -- apiece -- under infrastructure programs.
Now, as outrageous as all this sounds, here's what's scary: the federal Tories made long sought after political gains in Quebec City in the 2006 federal election and considered the area an absolutely integral foothold in a province they need if they're ever going to form a majority government.
All of which is to say that Labeaume is approaching the feds at a time when they will be motivated. And don't think he doesn't know it.
You know what politics and hockey have in common? Timing is everything -- and you always have to beware the hit from behind.
paul.wiecek@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition October 17, 2009 D1
More Columnists
- Back to Top
- Return to Columnists
Most Popular Columnists
- A life much too short won't be forgotten
- Penner's in a good place
- If it's on a stick, I'll eat it
- Sounds like he's still 'the baby'
- His life made our world a better place
- Bonds provide stability not offered by stock market
- Leaders refuse to give up on plan to improve ugly stretch of Route 90
- Nothing wrong with reliable Blue-print
- Strong growth in rural retail
- Back in Black
- Leaders refuse to give up on plan to improve ugly stretch of Route 90
- Good things come in small packages
- Jets could be greatly affected by deal
- His life made our world a better place
- It's a 'disease,' the studies agree
- For Tim's mother, the issue is safety
- Shy, kind and soft-spoken -- with the power to infuriate
- Take a page from the European playbook
- Strong growth in rural retail
- Football owes players some medical answers
- If we build it, look out
- Common courtesy decreasingly common
- Leaders refuse to give up on plan to improve ugly stretch of Route 90
- Majumder surprisingly frank -- and funny -- in HBO special
- Empty inside
- Katz versus Ford
- Can't share a vision when no one asks
- Some can't afford humane thing to do
- 'A special kind of sad'
- Riding changes could make Green blue
- His life made our world a better place
- A life much too short won't be forgotten
- If it's on a stick, I'll eat it
- It's a 'disease,' the studies agree
- His life made our world a better place
- Strong growth in rural retail
- English language rules the world
- Long haul 'family' Every employee is a spoke in the wheel at Bison Transport
- Gluten-free doesn't mean bad taste
- Shy, kind and soft-spoken -- with the power to infuriate
- Try cheese toast, caesar dressing at Like Hy's
- Where's our piece of N.D. oil boom?
- Rob Lowe shooting Casey Anthony story here
- It's a 'disease,' the studies agree
- The birth of a banana republic
- His life made our world a better place
- Rail firm looks to grain
- Play's the thing to catch conscience of Parliament
- Hope turns to dust in Niger
- The prince and the paper
- You've got a Target? We're in
- 'A special kind of sad'
- Common courtesy decreasingly common
Ads by Google









You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010; View the changes. New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.