Grendel
Well-Known Member
When SISU were attacked for rejecting the rent agreement one of the main reasons given was that the club were trying to get the Ricoh on the cheap. In fact in went further than that;
· The Ricoh was a community asset
· The Higgs Charity had to have their money back. In fact it was a moral outrage that anyone would offer them less. Not only that many “experts” claimed a lower offer was not acceptable as it breached charity commission rules
· The Ricoh had huge potential earnings. Anything less than £12 million was an insult and would be unfair on the poor Coventry tax payer
· The F and B revenues were sold by the club. An outrage to include this in the price, the club has to buy them back at market value.
A lot of the emphasis on this was the immorality (and apparent illegality) on the charity side and also the need to protect an asset from being undersold and so not fully benefitting the tax payer.
Well fast forward and we find the lot was sold for under £6 million.
The disturbing thing we then find is that, according to the local media, it is worth a lot more than that.
· The £6 million is now over £45 million
· The F and B is magically £195 million
· The basket case, (sorry the “washing its face” case, is a thriving business
What slightly confuses me here is why those very same people who were so adamant that this asset should be protected for the people of Coventry – all the taxpayers – now seem to have gone a little silent. Surely the taxpayer has been ripped off haven’t they? Do these people not care anymore?
Can you someone advise me why these people seem to have changed their stance?
· The Ricoh was a community asset
· The Higgs Charity had to have their money back. In fact it was a moral outrage that anyone would offer them less. Not only that many “experts” claimed a lower offer was not acceptable as it breached charity commission rules
· The Ricoh had huge potential earnings. Anything less than £12 million was an insult and would be unfair on the poor Coventry tax payer
· The F and B revenues were sold by the club. An outrage to include this in the price, the club has to buy them back at market value.
A lot of the emphasis on this was the immorality (and apparent illegality) on the charity side and also the need to protect an asset from being undersold and so not fully benefitting the tax payer.
Well fast forward and we find the lot was sold for under £6 million.
The disturbing thing we then find is that, according to the local media, it is worth a lot more than that.
· The £6 million is now over £45 million
· The F and B is magically £195 million
· The basket case, (sorry the “washing its face” case, is a thriving business
What slightly confuses me here is why those very same people who were so adamant that this asset should be protected for the people of Coventry – all the taxpayers – now seem to have gone a little silent. Surely the taxpayer has been ripped off haven’t they? Do these people not care anymore?
Can you someone advise me why these people seem to have changed their stance?