Football Nomads could become wanderers if police station rises on stadium site - Action News
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Manitoba

Football Nomads could become wanderers if police station rises on stadium site

The North Winnipeg Nomads may be forced to live up to their wandering namesake if the City of Winnipeg follows through on a proposal to build a new police station on the site of football club's stadium.

Old Ex Grounds, home to North Winnipeg Nomads, identified as preferred site for new North District cop shop

The North Winnipeg Nomads senior girls shut out the St. James Rods on Thursday night. (Travis Golby/CBC)

The North Winnipeg Nomads may be forced to live up to their wandering namesake if the City of Winnipeg follows through on a proposal to build a new police station on the site of football club's stadium.

The City of Winnipeg is eyeing up Charlie Krupp Stadium on the Old Exhibition Grounds along McPhillips Street as the preferred place to build a new North District police station that would replace the dilapidated and cramped District 3 station on Hartford Avenue in West Kildonan.

The city has set aside $23.1 million to build the new station, which would be the fourth and final new police station in a construction program that started in 2007 with the construction of a new East District station on Dugald Road in the St. Boniface Industrial Park.

The city also built a new West District station on Grant Avenue in Tuxedo and converted the former Canada Post warehouse-and-office-tower complex into a new police headquarters.

Mynarski Coun. Ross Eadie said the city has determined the Old Exhibition Grounds would best suit the needs of the Winnipeg Police Service, given the easy access to a major thoroughfare onMcPhillips Street.

North Winnipeg Nomads president Jeff Pirrie said he's disappointed the city would even consider building a police station at Charlie Krupp Stadium. (Travis Golby/CBC)
But if the city follows through on this decision, it would displace the North Winnipeg Nomads, a football program that serves about 300 amateur athletes boys, girls and young adults, aged seven to 22and has played out of Charlie Krupp Stadium since 1997.

This may also require the city to build a replacement stadium, said Eadie, who does not like the idea of displacing the football club.

"I'm opposed to that locationunless the city wants to come up with the extra money to build a football stadium," Eadie said Thursday in an interview. "We're talking about a stadium of the Krupp class but still that's expensive."

Eadie, the lone member of city council who serves on the Winnipeg Police Board, said the city looked at other locations including another site on the Old Exhibition Grounds, theformer brewery land on Redwood Avenue and the vacant former Safeway on Main Street.

According to city budget documents, the budget for land acquisition is $3.1 million, while construction would cost $20 million, assuming the project is able to reuse the design that served as the basis for the Grant Avenue and Dugald Road District Stations.

While no decision has been made, Nomads president Jeff Pirriesaid it would be a "bad idea" to displace his club.

"I was surprised, shocked and a little bit disappointed they would even thinkabout pickingthis site," he said Thursday evening, after the Nomads senior girls squad shut out the St. James Rods.

"We put 300 kids from the North End and area on this field every year [and]sometimes more. It'sa little bit disappointing."

The North Winnipeg Nomads have played home games at Charlie Krupp Stadium since 1997. (Travis Golby/CBC)
It would be counterproductive to harm amateur sport for the sake of serving the police, Eadie said.

"Nomads football is not just teaching kids about football, it's about team spirit, it's about community," he said."This is what they'reinstilling on youth and it keeps them out of trouble, right? It's a prevention thing."