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An ice rink for Pasco?
By CHUIN-WEI YAP
Published April 14, 2007
Oldsmar businessman Dave Beaudin hopes to build for an ice rink in central Pasco County for skaters and hockey players who now must travel 25 miles to compete. Beaudin hopes to persuade Pasco County officials to help with an estimated $10-million price tag to build the "Pasco Ice Pavilion." Beaudin, 42, runs the Beaudin Hockey Zone Skate Shop at Oldsmar's Tampa Bay Skating Academy with his father, Norm Beaudin, an 18-year veteran of pro hockey who skated for the NHL's St. Louis Blues and the old Minnesota North Stars. In Pasco, Beaudin's selling point is a facility that could draw hockey players and figure skaters, young and old, from Pasco, Hernando and northern Hillsborough counties. The only public rinks in the Tampa Bay area are in Brandon and Oldsmar, he said. Each is roughly 25 miles from central Pasco. "Kids from Hernando high schools have to go through Pasco, Hillsborough and Pinellas just to get to Oldsmar to play," he said. "This is a way to keep kids in Pasco and that's our vision." Pasco officials are listening. Beaudin is scheduled to make a formal pitch April 18 to the Tourism Development Council. Eric Keaton, who coordinates tourism council affairs, said he met Beaudin in February to discuss his pitch. Beaudin has eight acres under contract at Tower Road and U.S. 41 in Land O'Lakes, according to county records. That's where he plans to put the rink, he said. "We expect it would generate 40 to 55 jobs in the area," he said. These jobs would mainly focus on administration and support staff to run the facility. For months, rumor had it the Tampa Bay Lightning was exploring building a rink in Pasco. Former team captain Dave Andreychuk, who was said to be involved, did not reply to repeated calls for comment. Beaudin said Tuesday he is in talks with the Lightning "for their support," but was uncertain if these discussions would bear fruit. He said he also is raising funds from private sources for the proposed rink. In late March, after a five-year debate, Pasco's County Commission approved $7.9-million to build a tennis stadium in central Pasco, with the backing of the tourism development council. "We'd be ready to stick a shovel in the ground and get it going faster than the tennis center," he said. "We have baseball, football and tennis, but no hockey. We think this is going to be a niche."
[Last modified April 13, 2007, 22:26:40]
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