Alan Mayberry Letter to the Editor
Posted: Thu Jan 11, 2007 6:09 pm
So I was looking at the Sentinel-Tribune's new website (finally) and came across this in the letters to the editor. I would just do a link, but don't know how to do a tinyurl.
Now this letter strikes me as demeaning to the institution that is providing that facility in the first place, BGSU. We all know budgets have been tight for the past couple of decades and that has taken a toll on ALL of the Universities facilities. Athletics has seen the brunt of this shortage in funding. But why? Thats an easy answer, because it can. If I had the choice between renovating a facility that is functioning like the Ice Arena or building a new academic building to help the students attending BGSU I would pick the new building every day of the week. Mr. Mayberry rips the University for not having a second sheet of Ice, or letting the building fall to dis-repair and to a certain extent that is true. But wouldn't the demonstration of a true community-University partnership be realizing the University only gets so much money and going out to gather private funds for the renovation that is needed? It would not need to be the full amount, but 50% of the funds would show just how important the Ice Arena is to the community as a whole. I would like your thoughts on this letter. To me it boils down to someone who is bitching about a problem and not doing something about it.To the Editor: Expanded ice arena would be a real community partnership
All Sentinel-Tribune readers should know that they are witnessing the end of an era. Mike Furnas’ letter to the editor that appeared recently on the sports page was right on the money, but if you don’t turn to the sports page, you might have missed it.
Those of us who grew up in Bowling Green have been fortunate enough to see Scott Hamilton skate between periods of BGSU hockey games and go on to win four consecutive World Championships and a Gold Medal. We witnessed six state high school hockey titles and numerous other final four teams. We watched the likes of Ken Morrow and Mark Wells go from playing on “our” team to the Miracle on Ice Olympic Gold Medal. We followed National Hockey League stars like Rob Blake, Ken Klee, Dan Bylsma, and others on TV and Sports Illustrated and we swell with pride when their ties to Bowling Green are mentioned. We cheered when the Falcons won the National Hockey Championship in 1984. We watched these boys grow up to become adults, shaped by their experiences on the ice.
These athletes and many others have brought much positive attention to our university and our town.
But those days are ending. For whatever reason, the administration at BGSU has turned its back on the Ice Arena and those who have put BG in the spotlight for 40 years. While other universities are building new arenas and growing their programs, our university sits idly by and watches as our rink and our programs deteriorate. I can tell you that the ice arena staff do a tremendous job holding the facility together with duct tape and bailing wire as the university administration ignores the problem.
What exactly is the problem? Currently, the roof leaks flooding hallways and turning walls into waterfalls. Concessions are inadequate, locker rooms have adequate space or showers or useable lockers. Having only one sheet of ice is another problem. The youth hockey association and skating club can no longer host tournaments or competitions due to the lack of ice, which results in lost revenue to the community, the organizations and lost exposure for the university. BG youth hockey loses talented travel hockey players because practice times are at 6 or 7 in the morning.
We have just been informed that beginning next year that we should expect an increase in ice rental fees. This latest blow coupled with a lack of any real improvement in services will seriously damage the ability of youth hockey to continue. Instead people will look elsewhere for hockey in Findlay, Fremont, Sylvania and Toledo. If youth hockey loses players and the ice arena loses its biggest paying customer, we may lose all hockey and skating in Bowling Green forever. If you share this concern, please act before it is too late. You can contact Edward G. Whipple at [email protected] or (419) 372-2147.
President Ribeau talks all the time about a “community partnership,” between the university and the community, but we fail to see that talk result in any real action. Instead, the university talks and studies and talks some more while the matter grows ever worse. A remodeled and expanded ice rink would be a real community partnership which would draw potential athletes and students to BGSU. It would again become an asset to the campus, community, youth and entire area. From September to March youth hockey brings in families from all over Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan and Indiana on a weekly basis; they stay in hotels, eat in restaurants and may someday pay tuition to college.
The final chapter of the ice arena has yet to be written, it can still have a happy ending.
Alan Mayberry
Bowling Green
BGYHA President