End of the Session PawSox Battle Continues in House Finance Hearing Tuesday Night

Rachel Nunes, Contributor

End of the Session PawSox Battle Continues in House Finance Hearing Tuesday Night

Pawtucket Mayor Grebien
With the clock running out on the legislative session, resolution in the House’s embattled PawSox stadium bill still has not been reached.

At a House Finance Committee meeting Tuesday night, Pawtucket Mayor Donald Grebien urged the council to approve Speaker Nicholas Mattiello’s newest version of the bill, which is currently under consideration.

“We are at the beginning of something great for the city of Pawtucket,” Grebien said in his testimony. “My message to you is simple: please pass this legislation!”

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One main concern expressed by several lawmakers is the increasingly enticing offer from Worcester, Massachusetts. With incentive after incentive on the table, lawmakers are concerned the team will not have a reason to remain in the state.

The answer, Grebien said, lies in the team’s deep loyalty to the state. Having been an integral part of the city of Pawtucket for decades, he says the team is dedicated to staying there.

The deal to fund the new PawSox stadium is strongly opposed by the public -- see the recent poll results below.

“I’ve been closer to the PawSox than I have my own wife lately,” Grebien said with a laugh. “I know they’re willing to listen and build with us.”

Opponents of the bill continue to say the bill is a bad deal for the state.

Jim O’Neil, a member of the public who testified at the meeting, said this newest version of the bill is not the right one, instead, the legislature should have continued to work with the originally submitted version.

“I want to make this [proposal] work, I just don’t want to throw away another $20 or $30 million [in additional financing cost under the Mattiello deal]” O’Neil said, adding that while he “hated” to bring up 38 Studios, the state ended up acting as a backstop in that case.

Head of the RI Libertarian party, Pat Ford, a vocal opponent of the bill throughout the process, said the PawSox bill is proof that the state has not “learned from lessons of our past.”

Ford added that four years after the introduction of the proposal, there are no figures showing projected tax and income estimates.

“It always comes back to taxpayers,” Ford finished.

Bob Billington of the Blackstone Valley Tourism Council, however, said the bill is a new chance for Pawtucket. After years of unsuccessful attempts at economic development, this could be Pawtucket’s chance.

“Give us the economic opportunity this city deserves,” said Billington.

With just days left in the session, that chance may never come.


GoLocal Statewide Poll - Conducted by Harvard's Della Volpe - June, 2018

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