SIMON PIEMAN
I want to make this clear, i dont love the board, I dont want franchise football and I dont want to piss anyone off.... If you want proof I am against Franchising etc this should clear it up
http://archive.swindonadvertiser.co.uk/2005/12/1/255384.htmlWe don't want to lose our club
From the archive, first published Thursday 1st Dec 2005.
DON'T leave town that's the message from supporters protesting against the possibility of the club leaving Swindon.
After hearing Mark Devlin, Swindon Town's deputy chairman, say the club may move out of the town if the plan to revamp the County Ground is left dead in the water, Gary Stanley, 24, has decided to stage a peaceful protest in January at the match against Bournemouth.
As reported in Tuesday's Advertiser, the plans for a new stadium at the County Ground which would include a hotel, leisure complex and 600 new homes on the surrounding land look likely to be rejected by the council on legal grounds.
Questions were raised at a Swindon Council meeting last Thursday about the legality of the council bequeathing the club the land surrounding the development so it could raise the money to pay for the new stadium.
Mr Stanley, who works for Thames Water, said he had been talking with other supporters about the protest, which will be called Loud and Proud Give the Town a Ground Day.
"We as fans find it very disheartening to hear the board saying this," he said.
"We are now pleading with the council to work with the club to keep this illustrious club in Swindon."
He said that for teams such as Hull City, Reading and Swansea, new stadiums have brought success to the teams and given towns a centrepiece to be proud of.
"We are committed to showing the council, and the club, that the club needs to stay at its home in Swindon.
"If the club leaves Swindon, the town itself will lose thousands in income to local businesses from away supporters, who wouldn't visit the town if it wasn't for football."
The stadium and its surrounding infrastructure would cost £50.1m.
At the moment the club will pay for this by £25m earned from the sale of the adjacent land for development, £5m from the Lottery and Football Trust funding, with £20.1m left to find.
The controversy surrounds the £25m that the club will earn. If the plans go ahead as present, the council would be effectively giving Town the money by giving it the land.
On Tuesday Coun Justin Tomlinson (Con, Abbey Meads) who has been heavily involved in the project, said the plans could not go ahead as they are and that he would be meeting with the club to discuss alternative options.
Mark Devlin was unavailable to comment.