RI GOP: Convention Center Contracts Warning Sign for PawSox Deal

Kate Nagle, GoLocal Contributor

RI GOP: Convention Center Contracts Warning Sign for PawSox Deal

RI GOP: Convention Center Contracts Warning Sign for PawSox Deal
The Rhode Island House Republican Policy Group continued their investigation into the state's spending on the Convention Center Authority (CCA) at a meeting on Thursday, releasing findings from an Auditor General report that showed massive contact cost overruns in the 1990s that they said serve as a warning sign.  

"We want to make sure that the process is changed moving forward so that something like this doesn't happen again," said Deputy House Minority Leader Patricia Morgan, of the report from 1993 that showed that contract costs for the CCA - which has a lease agreement with the state that has cost Rhode Island taxpayers nearly half a billion of dollars in the past twenty years  -- were exponentially higher than what had been indicated at the outset. 

Read the Report HERE

Jeffrey Robert, the policy analyst for the group, looked at the Auditor General's report which showed that contracts for the construction of the convention center eventually overran projected costs by fifty to over a hundred times the original estimates.  

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The findings come on the heels of the report by the policy group that showed that the lease agreements with the CCA have cost the state $450 million since it was built -- and as the owners of the Pawtucket Red Sox pitched a $120 million thirty year lease agreement for a new $85 million stadium in Providence that was deemed "unfair" by Governor Raimondo earlier this week

Contract Cost Concerns

The group's meeting on Thursday focused on the initial impact studies for the Convention Center, including projected facility usage  -- and up front costs, which were shown that when eventually put out to bid, ballooned to significantly higher amounts by the time the work was done. 

According to Robert, the original impact study for the Convention Center had shown that estimated annual attendance was 300,000 to 500,000 people  -- but actual attendance from 2006-2014 averaged 294,000 annually. 

The RI Convention Center
Moreover, the Auditor General report showed that an engineering consulting firm whose bid had been chosen for $23,100 was eventually paid $1.2 million, and a contract for the removal of contaminated soil at the site in 1990 for $39,000 ultimately ended up clocking in at a cost of $3.9 million by 1991.  

"We want to put in legislation that you can't get that kind of escalator without resubmitting [a bid]," said Morgan. "We ought to put a whole process in place."

Currently the state pays over $25 million a year to the Convention Center Authority, who in turn says it stimulates hundreds of millions in economic impact annually.   

"We're not playing 'gotcha' here," said Morgan. "We just want to make the CCA can be more valuable to Rhode Islanders, and see them get busier.  We won't be able to cut out [the state] subsidies altogether, but as much as we can take the taxpayer out, the better," said Morgan. 

The group said unanimously on Thursday that they wouldn't support any lease agreement with the state for the PawSox to come to Providence -- at any level.  On Monday, Governor Raimondo noted she believed the current deal as proposed is "unfair" to Rhode Island taxpayers; it is unclear what the ownership's next steps will be. 

"It's still the same players, and same playbook," said Morgan.  "The similarities with the Convention Center shouldn't be lost on us."


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