ANALYSIS: Boston’s Olympics Bid is Dead, Will PawSox Providence Stadium Be Next?

GoLocalProv Business Team

ANALYSIS: Boston’s Olympics Bid is Dead, Will PawSox Providence Stadium Be Next?

There are a number of similarities between the proposed - and now dead - Boston Olympics bid and the effort by the new Pawtucket Red Sox ownership group to build a new stadium in downtown Providence. The top down corporate approach in Boston led by Suffolk Construction’s CEO John Fish and efforts by the now deceased Jim Skeffington were perceived by the public as overreaching and non-inclusive.

While Fish resigned and Skeffington passed away, both projects had once looked to combat public opposition with new public-relations strategies. In Boston, the “new” strategy failed and Boston 2024 is no more. In Providence, the new strategy offers less openness and transparency than Skeffington’s regular availability.

First, both the Boston Olympics effort and the Providence stadium bid were fueled by affluent, Boston-based business leaders who believed that each project was in the “best interest of the city.” Nearly all of the owners of the Pawtucket Red Sox are Massachusetts - or Florida  - residents. 

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

Second, the definition of each of the projects was ill-defined and constantly changing. In Boston and Providence the respective projects were announced with the pronouncement that there would be “no need for public financing.”  

PR pundits think a pretty rendering is all you need. Boston 2024 had a lot of them and it did not convince anyone.

But in both cases the definition of the project and the cost of financing was amorphous and constantly moving. The PawSox ownership initially asked for $120+ million in public financing, and have come up with no plan "B" since.

Third, promises of “transparency” have been fleeting.  Post a nearly-universal rejection of the PawSox demand for $120 million in public financing, the ownership group promised a scaled-back request and announced a state-wide listening tour.  The tour has turned from a listening tour into the Talking Heads.  Citizens are required to write their questions down and then a Red Sox official from Boston reads and answers the questions. 

To date, the PawSox ownership group has refused to answer questions about their new demands for public financing.  

Fourth, both in Boston and in Providence the proponents of the projects dismiss the opponents as fringe, insignificant minority groups. Rather than creating dialogues or trying to minimize opposition, both groups have taken on a strategy of marginalization. “Four local activists formed a group in opposition to our bid, and while we respect their differing views and their right to promote them, our polling data shows that they do not represent the majority of public opinion,” Boston 2024 wrote.

Fifth, old scars leave marks.  The Boston 2024 leaders failed to understand or ignored that the public rejected their claims of “on time and on budget” due to their experience with the messy, lost deadline Big Dig project. Mass residence did not believe that an outcome of the Olympics would be a better public transportation system.  Similarly, Rhode Islanders' penchant for big budget government subsidies for private companies is reluctant at best.  Taxpayers are still paying off the bonds for the failed 38 Studios, lawyers are still suing and no one was held legally or financially accountable for $75 million in public dollars evaporating - except Rhode Islanders.

In contrast to the PawSox, 38 Studios at least promised high paying jobs and the creation of a new industry in Rhode Island. The PawSox employ less than 30 full-time moderately paid employees who presently work just 6 miles from the proposed stadium. The net gain is negligible.

Maybe the Olympics in Boston and a glimmering new stadium in Providence would be boons to their respective cities, but the top down, jam-it-through strategy no longer seems smart and in Boston, it did not prove to be effective.


Pawsox Stadium Timeline

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.