
Tampa Bay Rowdies stadium in St. Pete could be demolished
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Mayor Ken Welch on Thursday unveiled a two-phase master plan for the downtown waterfront that would cost over $289 million.
Mayor Ken Welch sees an opportunity to showcase St. Petersburg's arts scene on the downtown waterfront by demolishing Al Lang Stadium.
On Thursday, Welch presented a conceptual master plan for the Center of the Arts to a St. Pete City Council subcommittee. In Welch's master plan, the stadium, which is home to the Tampa Bay Rowdies, would be demolished to make way for the new arts center. The stadium property, according to Welch's presentation, is "underused" and "could play a significant role in shaping" the city's public waterfront.
Phase one would include a new, 1,100-car garage with 20,000 square feet of ground-level retail, demolition of an existing garage, a new plaza, a new 60,000-square-foot conference center, a 50,000-square-foot expansion of the Dali Museum and improvements to the Mahaffey Theater.
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The second phase, slated for completion between 2028 and 2038, would demolish Al Lang Stadium, replacing it with an outdoor amphitheater. This phase would also include a 400-car garage with 15,000 square feet of ground-level retail, a new 30,000-square-foot Florida Orchestra facility along with the 3,000-to-4,000-seat amphitheater, designed by ASD | Sky.
The estimated costs of this two-phase master plan total $289.2 million, according to the presentation.
It's unknown what Welch's plan would mean for the Rowdies, which Tampa Bay Rays owner Stu Sternberg owns. A representative from the Rowdies was not immediately available for comment.
Welch has previously said he would only pursue a new stadium deal with the Rays if Sternberg, who walked away from a previous deal with St. Pete and Pinellas County in March, sold the team.
The economic report predicts construction activity over the next decade could generate more than $444.9 million in total economic output — $34 million annually during the time of construction.
The Firestone Grand Prix of St. Pete racetrack route is to remain as is while the Mahaffey Theater and Dali Museum work toward expansion.

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Chicago Tribune
a day ago
- Chicago Tribune
Naperville North's Brooke Welch wears No. 3 like older brother Bryce. But she can accomplish what he didn't.
Naperville North junior forward Brooke Welch's high school career was interrupted shortly after it began. When she was a freshman, Welch suffered a torn ACL just five minutes into the season opener against Barrington. Two other freshmen, Michelle Ruan and Claire DeCook, suffered the same season-ending injuries that year. All three returned the following season, when Welch switched from defender to forward and endeared herself to teammates and coaches. 'Brooke is such a special player,' Naperville North senior defender Emily Buescher said. 'When she comes onto the field, you know that she's going to do exactly what she's asked and she's going to be exactly where we need her to be.' That was the case again during the Class 3A state semifinals at North Central College in Naperville on Friday. Welch won the ball on the right wing and sent a perfect cross to the Tennessee-bound DeCook, who scored with 24:18 left in the first half. That was the first of DeCook's two goals in the Huskies' 2-1 win against Lane. 'It was a great goal,' Welch said. 'I trust my teammates to get in the box anytime anyone gets end line, so I knew someone would be there. 'I just took a quick glance, and I saw that Claire was there. She's proved that she can score, so it was great to be able to play that to her and her finish it. It was nice to see it hit the back of the net, especially in a game as big as this.' Welch's stats don't stand out. She has two goals and one assist for Naperville North (17-5-3), which advanced to play O'Fallon (22-1-1) in the state championship game at 7 p.m. Saturday. But one of her goals was the difference in the Huskies' 1-0 win over Oswego in a regional final. 'She's a kid who will do a 5-yard sprint into the fence, so I think for her to get that (assist) is everything,' Buescher said. 'It was her fulfilling her role. In the sense of our team, she's never been an overlooked player because she is so incredibly special in doing what she's supposed to do.' That's exactly what Welch did to set up DeCook's first goal. 'The defender had the ball at first, and she had to battle to get it back,' DeCook said. 'A lot of people would be just be like, 'Oh, I lost the ball,' and they give up there. But you can always expect Brooke to work hard. It's just that continuous fight throughout the game.' Naperville North coach Steve Goletz loves that. 'Brooke is an incredible kid who gives us such a spark,' Goletz said. 'She's an absolutely selfless kid. 'She gives everything to her teammates, and we're not playing in this game if she doesn't score the goal against Oswego. We're so lucky to have so many kids like Brooke.' Welch said she's lucky to have support from people like her brother Bryce, a former point guard for Naperville North who just completed his freshman year at Iowa Central. He was a fixture at his sister's games last year and was in attendance Friday. 'It was so great to have my brother here to watch me,' Brooke Welch said. 'I picked No. 3 because he was No. 3, so it was nice in a semifinal game to be able to wear his number. He's my best friend and biggest fan.' Bryce Welch was beaming with pride Friday. 'She played great today,' he said. 'It means a lot to be able to see her go out there and do her thing, do what she likes to do.' Bryce Welch never played soccer, but he often served as goalkeeper for his sister's practice sessions and always was ready to give sound advice. 'It was mostly just don't compare yourself to other people when you're trying to get better, especially at a younger age, because she was always younger than me,' he said. 'For her, I always wanted to make it about taking it one day at a time.' Brooke Welch played basketball until she got to high school. There were many days she would play against her brother. 'Bryce and I have always been super competitive,' she said. 'Having an older brother and all his friends around, I feel like I was bound to play a sport, 'It was nice to be able to play with him and learn from him. So I feel like my competitive side definitely comes from competing with my brother.' Now Brooke Welch has a chance to do something her brother didn't — win a state title. 'She battled back so hard from her injury,' Bryce Welch said. 'So to see her with a chance to win a championship is huge.'


Politico
4 days ago
- Politico
Welch on transit, energy, da Bears
Presented by Good Wednesday morning, Illinois. I'm talking to young journalists today about why newsletters matter. TOP TALKER PLAYBOOK Q&A: Illinois House Speaker Emanuel 'Chris' Welch acknowledges some of the biggest legislative goals didn't make it over the finish line last week in the General Assembly because the bills just weren't ready. Three big bills that fizzled include legislation to fix the transit fiscal cliff, the state's over-tasked power grid and Tier 2 pensions, which affect public employees hired after Jan. 1, 2011. 'There's still a lot that has to get done. You have to take your time and get it right. You can't rush and get it wrong,' Welch told your Playbook host. 'I mean, we wanna make sure that when we put something on the board it's ready for prime time and produce the best results for everyone,' said Welch, who wrapped up his fifth year as House speaker. The next step is to address the transit cliff, an energy bill and pensions during a fall veto session in the fall, he said. Here's our interview, edited for length and clarity. How did you get to this place where big bills discussed for months didn't get done? We remain committed to continue to do the work. In my five years, there's a lot of things that were left undone in May that we got done at subsequent times and that's what we're committed to doing. The transit legislation has been discussed for months. What was the sticking point and what's next? First, I think the House leaders who were appointed to lead that effort — Eva-Dina Delgado and Kam Buckner — are truly passionate about transit. They are transit geeks, and I applaud them for their work. Their working group spent more than a year looking for reforms. We wanted to do that before talking about funding. We cannot ask taxpayers to put more money into a failing system. I know they're close with regard to agreement on funding and governance, but they're not there yet. We want taxpayers to know that we're demanding changes to a broken system before we throw money at the problem. Do you support the legislation sent to the House from the Senate that included a funding mechanism to add a $1.50 fee on retail deliveries? I do not. It was DOA before they sent it. There's some differences in the reform and governance piece. The House has not even talked about funding because we were focused on reforms first. I'm not gonna put something on the board that my caucus has not discussed. Transit officials have warned about a fiscal cliff in which Covid monies will run out by the end of the year and lead to layoffs. Have you talked to transit officials about that? They will do what they have to do, but from our standpoint, transit is funded through the end of the year. We know the challenges they face. But we want to make sure that reforms come before funding. We're going to keep doing the work here in the summer and in the fall. We're going to be back for a veto session in October. Legislation to address the state's power grid by adding wind and solar and battery storage also failed to win approval. What happened? Our energy conversations were very reminiscent of my first year as speaker in 2021 when we thought we were there and then worked through the summer to get something done in September, which turned out to be one of the most important pieces of energy I've ever seen. Conversations are going to continue, and we're going to get the best result that we possibly can. And what about the proposal to improve the pension system for government employees hired since 2011? That bill is projected to cost quite a bit of money. We heard a lot from the business community and we need to make sure that all stakeholders are part of the conversation. There's been a lot of hand wringing about if and whether to give state funding to the Chicago Bears and Chicago White Sox. Are those issues dead in the water? The Bears and the White Sox should take a look at the Chicago Fire, which is leading the way by building a stadium with private funding. It's going to be transformative. It's going to be great for the state. It's on par with the Ricketts family building in Wrigleyville for the Chicago Cubs. It's the right approach. I think the Bears in the White Sox should take note. Switching to politics — because we're POLITICO. Your name has popped up as possibly filling the lieutenant governor seat if Gov. JB Pritzker runs again. Or even running for governor if he doesn't. I'm so flattered that people put my name in those conversations, but I love the job that I currently have. I get to walk into that beautiful building and serve as the people's speaker. It's an honor of a lifetime and I'm going to continue to do that as long as the people will have me. RELATED Chicago Fire plan to build $650M soccer stadium at The 78 in South Loop: It would be privately financed, by the Tribune's Robert Channick Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson urges state lawmakers to tax the 'ultra rich' to avert mass transit cuts, by the Sun-Times' Fran Spielman With electric prices going up, advocates tried — and failed — to reform the energy sector, by Capitol News' Andrew Adams Lawmakers again fail to act on hemp, while a new study highlights growing health concerns, by the Tribune's Robert McCoppin THE BUZZ ENDORSEMENT PRIDE: Former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and her wife, Amy Eshleman, have endorsed Congresswoman Robin Kelly in her bid for the U.S. Senate. The former mayor leads a list of LGBTQ+ leaders backing Kelly in her bid to replace retiring Sen. Dick Durbin. Also on the list are Chicago Alds. Bennett Lawson and Lamont Robinson, Kane County Commissioner Alex Arroyo and AIDS Foundation Chicago CEO John Peller. The full list is here. 'We stand behind Robin Kelly because she has always stood with us,' Robinson, chair of the council's LGBTQ caucus, said in a statement. 'I personally experienced her resolve when she stood with me to save Mercy Hospital and the vital role it plays in my community.' If you are Chicago Fire owner Joe Mansueto, Playbook would like to hear from you! Email: skapos@ WHERE'S JB No official public events WHERE's BRANDON At 1002 South Racine Avenue at 1 p.m. for the Roosevelt Square ribbon-cutting Where's Toni At Mount Olivet Cemetery at 1:30 p.m. with the Archdiocese of Chicago and Cook County officials for a committal service for indigent, unknown and unborn persons Have a tip, suggestion, birthday, new job or a (gasp!) complaint? Email skapos@ BUSINESS OF POLITICS — In IL-02: State Sen. Robert Peters has been endorsed by some Black Caucus members from the Chicago City Council and the Illinois General Assembly. Here's the list. — Patrick Hanley, who's running for state Senate, has been endorsed by MWRD Commissioner Precious Brady-Davis. Hanley is running for the 9th District seat now held by state Sen. Laura Fine, who's running for Congress. — Nick Uniejewski, who's running in the Democratic primary against state Sen. Sara Feigenholtz (6th District), talks about running his campaign like a dinner party, via H Kapp-Klote's blog. HIGHER-ED — University of Illinois — long home to thousands of foreign students — braces for visa revocations for Chinese: 'The school's flagship campus, which has the second largest number of international students of all public universities in the country, could be hit hard by Trump's plan to revoke Chinese student visas,' by the Sun-Times' Violet Miller, Pat Nabong and Kade Heather. 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Quig — Chicago is sinking: Land under our feet is retreating more than most cities: 'Chicago is the fifth-fastest-sinking major city in the United States, according to a new study. While the city is only sinking by a few millimeters every year, experts say the shift could damage buildings and other infrastructure,' by the Block Club's Molly DeVore. Reader Digest We asked about the one exercise you try to do every day. Andrew Davis: 'I definitely stretch every day.' G. A. Finch: '100 pushups.' Cynthia Given: 'Walk for an hour on the trail in my city park (unless the temperature dips below my age).' Carlton Hull: 'Sit-ups.' Ed Mazur: 'A walk around my block at least once a day.' Marilynn Miller: 'I try to walk at least some every day. At my age (91), 'if you don't use it, you lose it.'' Timothy Powell: 'Bike 20-30 miles every day/year-round in rain, snow and hot weather. Hills, wind and dangerous vehicles are my enemies.' Timothy Thomas: 'At least 100 push-ups and sit-ups before going to bed for the evening.' NEXT QUESTION: What's your favorite ballpark food? KEEPING UP WITH THE DELEGATION — Mike Quigley takes a shot at House Democratic grandees: 'The nine-term Chicago Democrat criticized former party leaders who have since claimed gavels,' by POLITICO's Ben Jacobs and Nicholas Wu. THE NATIONAL TAKE — 'Disgusting abomination': Musk goes nuclear on Trump's 'big beautiful bill,' by POLITICO's Giselle Ruhiyyih Ewing — White House allies 'disappointed' at Musk's opposition to megabill, by POLITICO's Adam Wren, Adam Cancryn and Dasha Burns — Thune acts fast to cut deals and move Trump's megabill, by POLITICO's Jordain Carney Transitions — The Human Rights Campaign is adding Jonathan Lovitz as SVP of campaigns and comms and Amy Peña as SVP and general counsel. Lovitz most recently was a director of public affairs and senior adviser at the Biden Commerce Department. Peña was general counsel for the Chicago Community Trust. — Benjamin Berkman is now a senior attorney with Romanucci & Blandin's civil rights team in Chicago. Berkman was the chief assistant inspector general for legal counsel in the City of Chicago Office of Inspector General. — Joseph Mahoney and Erick Palmer have joined Honigman in its Chicago office as partners in the intellectual property litigation practice group. They both have joined from Mayer Brown. EVENTS — Today: State Reps. Lisa Davis and Michael Crawford will be feted at a fundraiser hosted by fellow Reps. Kam Buckner and Nick Smith. Details here — Saturday: State Rep. La Shawn Ford will lead 50+ bikers on a 50-mile 'Bike Across Chicago' from Cabrini-Green to Altgeld Gardens to raise money for the nonprofit By The Hand Club For Kids. Details here — Saturday: The Rose Fitzpatrick Legislative Breakfast & Awards is being held. The event is organized by the Bloomingdale Township Democratic Organization. Details here — June 26: Chicago Ald. William Hall is hosting a birthday party fundraiser. Details here TRIVIA TUESDAY's ANSWER: Congrats to Brendan O'Sullivan for correctly answering that Brian Doherty was the Golden Gloves champ who was elected alderman. TODAY's QUESTION: What two counties in Illinois are named after a governor of New York? Email skapos@ HAPPY BIRTHDAY Richland County Board Member and chair of the Richland County Democratic Central Committee Cynthia Given, Retired water commissioner Frank Avila, attorney Kevin Fanning, Good Realty Group President Sheldon Good and PR pro Lynda O'Connor -30-
Yahoo
5 days ago
- Yahoo
News 13 awards Scholar Athletes of the Year
PANAMA CITY, Fla. (WMBB) — After another school year of honoring standout student-athletes across the Panhandle, WMBB News 13 has named its 2024-2025 Scholar Athletes of the Year. This year's Scholar Athletes of the Year are Gillian Peaden of North Bay Haven Charter Academy and Jackson Welch of Malone High School. As part of the annual honor, both Peaden and Welch received a $1,000 scholarship courtesy of the attorneys of Perry & Young P.A. and WMBB News 13. Both seniors were recognized not only for their excellence in sports but also for their academic achievements and leadership on campus. Peaden was a leader on North Bay Haven's girls weightlifting team, helping the Buccaneers become one of the top programs in the region. She finished her senior season as a state champion, capping off a decorated high school career. In the classroom, Peaden maintained high academic standards, earning admission to the University of Florida. However, she plans to begin her college journey locally at Gulf Coast State College while continuing to compete in weightlifting at the national level. 'There were times when I was supposed to work out and I just told Paille, 'Hey, I really need to study,'' Peaden said. 'I had gym third period and a test fourth period. I'd reschedule my workout, but my grades had to come first.' Welch, the valedictorian of Malone High School, has been a four-year starter on the Tigers boys basketball team and is regarded as one of the top three-point shooters in the Southeast. This fall, he'll join the Chipola College men's basketball program as a preferred walk-on. Welch said staying disciplined on both ends, academics and athletics, has always been his approach. 'A lot of times guys just want to focus on their sport,' Welch said. 'But to be a true scholar-athlete, you need to put equal time into your studies. It's just as important.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.