Patti DoyleThe public relations team for the new Pawtucket Red Sox ownership group, who worked to usher through the failed stadium proposal on the 195 land, is out.
Patti Doyle of Patti Doyle Communications is no longer representing the teams's owners as they regroup after the demise of its first effort to move the AAA team from Pawtucket to Providence, following strong public opposition to the proposal.
When contacted on Monday about Pawtucket Mayor Don Grebien’s request to obtain the purported feasibility study from the new ownership group, Doyle said, “Please send all media requests to [Dan Rea].”
Rea, who is the assistant to PawSox owner Larry Lucchino, said Monday, “We have been in discussions with Mayor Grebien, but we have no new developments on that front to report.”
Baseball RI Defunct?
With the full rejection of the Providence 195 stadium proposal in September announced by Rhode Island Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello, the campaign behind the effort has been winding down over the past month.
The latest update on the Baseball RI Facebook page was on September 11, regarding recognizing the anniversary of the terror attacks.
The group never got beyond 800 supporters on Facebook; just one of the opposition groups — Keep PawSox in Pawtucket — had over 3000 supporters on its one page. The ill-fated "listening tour" scheduled by the ownership group over the summer was maligned in both traditional and social media for being top-down and not truly responsive to attendees.
The 195 proposal was never able to surmount the response to initial launch back in April at the Chamber of Commerce, which by the time it got to the RI Commerce Corporation later that month, Governor Gina Raimondo declared the same day that the ask by the owners was too much.
PawSox Stadium Aftermath: Winners and Losers
Winner
Coalition Radio -- A small group of libertarian activists relentlessly advocated against any public financing for a private venture. Pat Ford, Dave Fisher and Tony Jones leveraged internet radio and social media to pound the project and the costs.
Loser
Speaker Nicholas Mattiello -- The Speaker was all in for the project. He repeatedly voiced his strong support for the project. Some said it was a project for his legacy and others said he supported the project as a result of influence of the ownership group and their lobbyist Bob Goldberg.
It wasn't long ago that the Speaker said the Providence Stadium would be revenue positive. In a few short weeks, the project somehow went from supposedly financially advantageous to taxpayers to DOA.
Winner
GOP -- The Rhode Island Republicans came out against the project early and kept raising questions about the cost and the approval process. Despite being in the political minority, the Republicans used their thorn-in the-side status to play the spoiler.
Loser
Old School Top Down PR Strategy -- Renderings, fact finding trips for leaders and listening tours were all the strategies embraced by the ownership team and each came back and burned them. The listening tour had higher attendance at many sites by taxpayers who were opposed to the project -- and the fact they had to write their questions down, and be lectured to in response, did not go over well by opponents.
Winner (maybe)
Pawtucket Mayor Donald Grebien -- It looked like the Mayor was a loser for sure with his city's most valuable asset moving from Pawtucket just 6 miles away to a gleaming new $100 Million project in Providence. With the Providence Stadium dead, Pawtucket has a window to try and create a proposal that improves McCoy, is financially viable and acceptable to the ownership group.
The window is very short, and Grebien will move from the winners' column to the losers' bracket if the PawSox leave RI.
As the Mayor wrote in a GoLocal MINDSETTER™ piece, "We remain hopeful that the new owners will see the value that Pawtucket has given their brand and that the growth we are experiencing will only strengthen it. We hope they will Join the Evolution here in Pawtucket."
Loser
Jorge Elorza -- The Providence Mayor was unable to put together a deal and a location that worked for taxpayers. There was -- and still may be -- an opportunity to bring hundreds of thousands of new visitors into the city annually at the 195 site.
Elorza needs to change the present narrative from crime, a decrepit recreation system, and visits to meet with Guatemalan corrupt leaders to where the city needs to be.
Winner
Taxpayers -- A coalition of taxpayer groups and activists scored their most significant political victory to date. This may spark an empowered effort to take on other issues with enthusiasm.
Loser
Public Financing of Stadiums in the US -- The dramatic defeat of the proposed stadium in Providence may cause other cities, counties and states to take a harder look at the economics of public financing of stadiums.
There is now a blueprint for how taxpayers and progressives can build a coalition to oppose a professional sports team, organized labor and billionaire ownership interests.
The PawSox defeat and the Boston Olympics collapse may speak to a broader grassroots movement opposed to the spending on public funds on private projects.
Winner
Grassroots Activists -- Multiple grassroots efforts sprang up to oppose the stadium move, and perhaps none as vocal - or visible -- as "Organizing for Pawtucket" and David Norton.
Even when a new stadium looked like it was on life support, Norton and supporters utilized both social media and traditional boots-on-the-ground techniques (read: canvassing the Speaker's neighborhood -- in Cranston) to keep the pressure on until the deal was dead.
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