By Steve Kidd - Penticton Western News Published: July 04, 2013 8:00 PM
For two months, they’ve been behind closed doors, but
indications are that the City of Penticton is ready to take the South
Okanagan Events Centre contract discussion back into the light of day. A special council meeting has been called for July 8,
with the SOEC management contract as the sole item on the public agenda.
The special meeting coincides with the deadline for acting mayor Garry
Litke to resign in order to run for mayor in the Sept. 7 byelection.
Litke said a major decision like awarding the SOEC contract
would be best dealt with before council is reduced to five members,
just one above quorum, the minimum needed to vote on any issue. Since the request for proposals closed at the end of
April, the sifting of the proposals has been conducted behind closed
doors by the SOEC Select Committee. “We are down to the fine strokes,” said Litke. “The
RFPs have all been evaluated. The committee has made a recommendation to
council.” That recommendation was made at a closed council
meeting, since it involved proprietary information from the companies
making the bid. Litke said details about the bids couldn’t be released
for the same reason; the bidding companies operate similar facilities all over North America. “They don’t want one facility to know what kind of deal the other facility is getting,” said Litke. Mark Ziebarth, one of the committee members, described
the selection process as detailed and rigorous, dealing with 250 to 300
page submissions from the bidders. “It was really good to see that the city was prepared
to handle this process in a very professional way,” said Ziebarth. The
SOEC committee consists of two council members, four city staff and four
private sector representatives. “Six years ago, when the city first signed the contract with Global, there was nothing like this. This time, we were ready,”
said Ziebarth. The proposals cover operations at the main 5,000 seat
arena and the community rink as well as Memorial Arena and the Penticton
Trade and Convention Centre, which altogether had an operating budget
of $4.2 million last year. Global Spectrum has operated the SOEC since
it opened in 2008, under an initial five-year contract. The March 7 RFP
issued by the city indicated that depending on value to the city, a
10-year contract would be considered.
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