Democratic Candidate for Mayor takes the CCO up on our offer to Publish Position Papers
Rick Davis, Democratic Party nominee for Mayor of Evansville, said Monday that the community deserves a final say in the ultimate fate of Roberts Stadium.
“The facility is paid off – it does not have a mortgage – and I feel that we can find a useful purpose of Roberts Stadium once the new arena opens,” said Davis, 42, who is the current County Treasurer. “Taxpayers spent $17 million to refurbish Roberts Stadium in 1990, and they deserve to see that due diligence is exercised before a final decision on the fate of this building is made by City leaders.”
Davis made his comments less than a week after it was announced at a Parks Board meeting that the City had scheduled Aug. 3 as the day to begin mothballing the stadium, which opened in 1956 but underwent an extensive $17 million remodeling in 1990.
Davis said he went door-to-door in the neighborhoods surrounding Roberts Stadium during the last six months “and I did not talk to one single person who thought the building should be demolished.” He noted that he held 8 Town Hall meetings earlier in the year, and the subject of Roberts Stadium continually came up, “and I have said from the very beginning that we need to have a community discussion on how our community can “Reinvent Roberts.”
Davis pointed to other local municipal buildings that have been saved when the community felt their previous usefulness had expired, including the Old Post Office; the Old Jail; the Old Courthouse; and The Coliseum. He also noted how past city leaders had demolished other iconic buildings to the dismay of Evansville residents, including the L&N Railroad, the old Central High School, and the old Community Center.
“Obviously, the Stadium cannot compete with those other old buildings whose fate met the wrecking ball when it comes to architectural beauty,” said Davis. “But the fact remains: Roberts Stadium is and remains an icon in the Evansville community and deserves to be ‘reinvented.’ We have invested $127.5 million in a new Downtown arena, and I understand it would be counterproductive to keep Roberts Stadium in its existing manner, which would compete with the new arena. But I fail to see the value to spend good taxpayer dollars to tear down a 21-year-old, $17 million investment. What a waste of construction materials and taxpayer dollars. We can do better with our investment.”
Davis said he also felt the stadium should be left alone for until local leaders are able to determine the new arena is equipped to handle annual Roberts Stadium events, including whether sufficient parking exists in Downtown to accommodate patrons, as well as to allow time for the community to help decide the stadium’s ultimate fate.
“Once you lose a convention for one year, it gives that group of people an opportunity to look at other communities to host their events, and they may never come back,” said Davis. “It just makes good economical sense to keep the stadium available as long as possible as a life raft to potentially cater to these important conventions, which boost our local economy year after year, in the event that something unexpected arises after the arena’s opening.