Guest MINDSETTER™ Steven Artigas – Skeffington’s Secrets

Steven Artigas, GoLocalProv Guest MINDSETTER™

Guest MINDSETTER™ Steven Artigas – Skeffington’s Secrets

James Skeffington, a principal in the consortium hoping to build a new Pawsox stadium in Providence, has refused to divulge key financial information to the I-195 Redevelopment District Commission. These details, he says, are private, in spite of the fact that the new owners want a $120 million monetary commitment from taxpayers as well as tax-free land donated by Providence to pave their way to success in this venture- an egregious example of socialized risk for private profit.   More recently, as a sweetener, the new team owners are offering to pay for the land after all, although they still "need" the taxpayers' $120 million stake in the project.  Apparently, when they ran their first proposal up the flagpole, no one saluted.  

If the idea of a ballpark is not feasible without major taxpayer concessions, it should not be built.  The argument that other ballparks have been taxpayer subsidized is a red herring, as those team owners also have pitted one city against another, successfully promoting public investment for their own private gain. The prospect of squandering this valuable property on a venture that would generate a few seasonal minimum wage jobs is questionable at best.  And, let's not forget the negative financial impact on Pawtucket.  We should bear in mind that these men are businessmen first, not baseball fans, and this proposal is all about the bottom line.  They have clearly said as much, when they dismissed the idea of upgrades to McCoy Stadium.  That option, they say, is not sufficiently lucrative. 

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

The owners have also rejected another, privately-owned site in Providence, in spite of their admission that it would actually be better suited for their new stadium.  The stumbling block on the Allens Ave. site seems to be the lack of sufficient  public subsidy.

The redevelopment of the former I-195 land is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that we cannot afford to get wrong.  Let us not succumb to the rosy picture these men have painted, and use the land for its intended purpose, a jumpstarter for the state's moribund economy

Steven Artigas: I am some years' retired from 40 years as a self-employed building contractor in RI.  I have lived my entire life here and despair to see the results of decades of short-sighted leadership in our state. It is time that voices are heard on behalf of the million or so of us who lack connections in the state hierarchy. 


The Ten Biggest Questions Facing the PawSox Coming to Providence

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.