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Top Headlines

Theme Park Dream Still Alive

Four Years After Groundbreaking, Officials Not Giving Up

By SHELLEY HANSON Staff Writer
POSTED: January 10, 2010

WHEELING - Ohio County Administrator Greg Stewart does not know exactly when folks will get to ride roller coasters or eat funnel cakes at The Highlands. But plans for a Wild Escape Theme Park have not been abandoned, he said.

"I still speak with (theme park president Steve Minard) three or four times a month," Stewart said. "Steve hasn't hung up his cleats and said, 'You guys took too long."'

A groundbreaking ceremony for the park was held in 2006, with Minard saying portions of the park would be up and running in the summer of 2007. This was the same ceremony at which residents learned a new Olive Garden restaurant would be built at the site.

Minard said that because of the "complexity" of building a theme park, he anticipated it would take "five to seven years" total for it to be completed. Since the groundbreaking occurred about four years ago, the park could appear in one to three years if Minard's estimated time frame holds true.

While the county has said it will cover the cost of earthwork and infrastructure, Minard is taking care of the rest. He noted despite the recession, his investors for the project still are in line.

"Recessions come and go. Even the Depression ended," Minard said. "Even in the worst of times, people need an escape."

Stewart noted, however, in the beginning the project did meet some roadblocks. Before any work would be allowed, federal and state environmental permits first had to be OK'd. The last of the permits was finally approved last year.

"If I had a date I would tell you," Stewart said when asked when he believed earthwork for the park might begin.

The county currently is seeking permission from the West Virginia Development Office to use an additional $30 million in tax increment financing for more development at the site.

In addition to making space for 18 new businesses in 2010, a portion of this money is expected to be used for earth moving and infrastructure work related to Wild Escape, according to the TIF plan.

Stewart said he expects the state to make its decision about the TIF plan sometime this month.

He noted bringing in the new businesses is a top priority for The Highlands, but work related to the theme park could happen concurrently. Although the environmental permits are in place, the Ohio County Development Authority still must approve an engineering firm expected to oversee earth work at the site. Stewart said two firms have been chosen by a subcommittee of sorts, and the OCDA is expected to be presented those firms in February.

Meanwhile, Minard said roller coasters for the park still are in storage in Germany, Argentina and Florida, as they have been for the past few years.

"It's better to be safe and have them available," Minard said, noting when the park is "ready to go," so will the coasters.

Although he said he would not mind sharing examples of the manufactured rides, Minard has said he does not want any potential competitors to see what he has planned for fear they may steal his ideas.

When the building site becomes "pad ready," Minard said he would be able to estimate an opening date for Wild Escape.

"We would love to move faster. ... It's no exaggeration to say we're building a small city," Minard said.

 
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Member Comments
View Comments: | 1-25 |26-29 | Post a comment
raylovestennis
04-08-10 5:28 PM
I'm with you tmoore. Why doesn't wheeling use the tax money on something that wheeling doesn't have BUSINESS I know it is new to all you wheeling folks but it would be to me too but i'm from PA

Shark88
01-10-10 10:57 PM
Is this the same guy that penned the song, "My Illusive Dreams"?

pickles
01-10-10 9:21 PM
I hope everyone is wrong, but it does look pretty bleak at this point. I would love to get something like this in the area, but when established parks are pulling up stakes, I find it improbable that anyone would want to gamble on a new park. It is just too difficult to admit the dream is dead. I still wonder if the army corps engineers out of Pittsburgh drug their feet on purpose for the permits over the desire to prevent competition for Kennywood.

mernie
01-10-10 8:54 PM
Ho,hum. If we don't get this thing, how's about a nice retirement community with all the amenities of those Florida places with a tramway to the golf links at the parks. Some folks like the change of seasons. Or, what say they build a huge campground with a lake and a stage for holding music festivals and playgrounds and fishin and hiking trails. Think outta the box.

EllisWyatt
01-10-10 5:52 PM
Why not develop this site as a mixed office/light industrial/entertainment/housing development similar to Southpointe near Canonsburg?

If WV would get its' tax, regulatory, tort and corruption reforms in place, businesses might come to WV. Southpointe is COMPLETELY sold out in all areas and they are building a Southpointe II to keep up with the demand.

Why not such a project at the Highlands? Right on Route 70. 1 hour from Pittsburgh. 2.5 hours from Columbus. A perfect spot.

It will never happen. This is because local politicians and union bosses always have their hands out. If you are not willing to fork over a brown paper bag full of Benjamins, you can forget any new development.

dolphin3111
01-10-10 5:42 PM
What Ellis said is correct. Forget it.

tmoore
01-10-10 5:12 PM
Wheeling will need all the shovels it can buy,as this story is getting way too deep in sh--.

delerium
01-10-10 4:13 PM
What the Ohio Valley needs to concentrate on is "shovel ready" industrial sites. Not for retail, but for industrial purposes. The only employment you'll get out of a theme park is seasonal, minimum wage jobs, with no insurance. Wheeling will NEVER become a vacation destination. Wake up Wheeling!

Joanie1982
01-10-10 3:35 PM
Forget these big-time outside interests, why can't somebody local build a theme park, but on a much smaller scale? The economy isn't great right now, but there's money to be had, squirreled away by a few. Why don't these people build up more wealth by doing something constructive with it?

linebacker
01-10-10 3:31 PM
They could have haunted rides thru downtown in all the vacant building. I'm already paying 15 dollars to take my kid to festival of lights.

atoddh
01-10-10 3:27 PM
Six Flags - with long time operations in major cities - is in bankrupsey.

1whoworks
01-10-10 3:21 PM
Don't waste a dollar of tax money. It is very unlikely it will be built. If built it is less likely that it will profit.

jbowsher
01-10-10 2:08 PM
Two words.....Paradise Lake.

OhValleyGuy
01-10-10 1:27 PM
Michael, you forgot the fact that Geaugua Lake / Sea World both closed and Geaugua completely liquidated all its rides a few years ago as well. If a park like that can't survive in a heavily populated area with rides that had been installed and most likely paid off for years, how's an upstart park like this going to survive in an area with the population and financial situation like Wheeling's??

PCGS70
01-10-10 12:28 PM
I don't know if it will ever be built or not but one thing is certain, the theme park will not depend on people from Wheeling to keep it running. They will get business from all over the United States. People will travel to see it. Like Cabela's, ....you think Wheeling people are keeping it's doors open? No. They get business from all over the Tri-State area PLUS traffic from impulse buyers traveling Interstate 70

corgitoy
01-10-10 10:08 AM
In the words of the late George Kellas, "I won't believe there will be an amusement park up there until I'm riding the roller coaster."

EllisWyatt
01-10-10 10:02 AM
This park will NEVER be built. This guy is a fraud. Has he ever built anything? Didn't he promise a Wild Escape park would be built in the Council Bluffs/Omaha area for years? Has it ever been built?

This guy is a snake oil salesman. His motivations, other than attention and, perhaps, fleecing taxpayers, are unclear.

There will be no theme park.

All of the other established companies have either filed for bankruptcy or been sold. Even Kennywood Corp. sold itself! Yet, we are led to believe that some huckster has wealthy investors ready to pony up $200 million, for Phase I alone, to invest in a theme park near declining Wheeling WV?

The same county folks who oversaw the poor construction at the Highlands, rang up $220 million in debt and collect less than $3 million per year in rents are also going to manage this theme park project?

This whole thing would be laughable if taxpayers weren't taking it in the rear, as always.

billybob
01-10-10 9:58 AM
Come to think of it I paid for new water and sewer lines at the High lands and that didn't make my water and sewer bill go up did it? Why can't we upgrade city water and sewer plant the same way? We can't do that. And I thought taxes paid for stuff like that. Oh well I guess the answer is I have to quit thinking!

billybob
01-10-10 9:48 AM
Let us look at this another way. I was paying for a wharf parking lot, and didn't finish on that but turned that in to scrap for an arena. I am still paying for that and on top I have to furnish the ice and naming money goes to teams. Whoops now only team. I have paid for an art center that doesn't seem like I have made anything on that. I bought buildings to tear down. A theater. My taxes have gone everywhere but where they should. I still have to pay for intrastructure costs on top of that. Rate hikes, tax hikes, I pay other people to lose money on parking lots. I am paying taxes for casinos to take my money. Nope I don't go there so that is still not a winner for me. I pay for building stores to sell to me. Now as if I didn't have enough they want to take my money for an amusement ride! Am I having fun yet?

delerium
01-10-10 9:03 AM
I'm curious to know if Steve has received any public money for his dream?

billybob
01-10-10 8:57 AM
Dream slowly turning into nightmare! No money down except taxpayer funds down the tubes never to return like industry!

Michael
01-10-10 8:53 AM
Hard Rock Park in South Carolina filed for bankruptcy 9 months after opening in April 2008. Six Flags filed for bankruptcy in June 2009. Cedar Fair announced on December 16, 2009, that it was being acquired by Apollo Global Management. The price? Reportedly $635 million in cash and assumption of over $1.6 billion in debt. Yeh, good luck with that Wild Escape!

delerium
01-10-10 8:51 AM
I can't believe the media in the OV still feels this guy is news worthy. The park is never going to be built. He's a scam artist.

ROFLMAO
01-10-10 8:49 AM
JUST WOULD LUV TO KNOW WHERE THEY PURCHASE THAT GOOD STUFF, OPPPS FROM THE BACK ROOM @ CITY BUILDING? DREAM STILL ALIVE, WOW DREAMS IS ALL IT IS U MEAN. WE ALL DREAM, DOESNT MEAN DIDLY SQAT!

wvhoopie
01-10-10 8:46 AM
This things just seems like pie in the sky. Good luck with all of that...........

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