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Shockoe-stadium foe says plan is bad deal for taxpayers

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  • Shockoe-stadium foe says plan is bad deal for taxpayers

    Richmond Times Dispatch
    May 10 2009


    Shockoe-stadium foe says plan is bad deal for taxpayers

    By Jeremy Slayton
    Published: May 10, 2009

    Charlie Diradour isn't afraid to take a stand, especially about issues
    that concern his hometown.

    His roots in Richmond date to the 1920s, when his grandfather
    immigrated from Armenia. As Diradour puts its, he has a passion to be
    a steward to the city for what it provided him and his family -- the
    chance to make a living.

    "It's very important to stand up against what I think is wrong, or
    stand up for what I think is right," said Diradour, who hails from a
    family of successful real estate investors.

    Diradour, 45, is leading a charge against developing a baseball
    complex in Shockoe Bottom. He formed a Web site and Facebook group in
    support of keeping baseball on the Boulevard through either a major
    renovation of The Diamond or construction of a new stadium.

    He contends it would be less expensive than building in Shockoe and
    the more-western location would be convenient for baseball fans who
    live in the counties.

    Until a decision on a home for baseball is final, Diradour promises to
    continue his opposition to public bonds to build a $60 million
    ballpark in the Bottom.

    "My duty, as the person who started this, is to see it through to the
    end," said Diradour, president of Lion's Paw Development Co. "Good or
    bad . . . win or lose, I'm going to see this through to the end."

    Diradour owns primarily corner properties in the Fan District --
    deLux, Kuba Kuba, Buddy's Place restaurant -- but is venturing west
    along the Libbie and Grove corridor and north into Henrico County.

    A self-described conservative developer, Diradour said he doesn't have
    real estate holdings on the Boulevard or in Shockoe Bottom. He
    believes city residents, not a group of developers, should decide
    where a stadium is built.

    "I think that Charlie is a bottom-line, fiscal realist," former
    Richmond City Council President William J. Pantele said. "I think his
    voice is one of 'what makes business sense and what are the
    alternatives and which is the best deal -- which is the wisest course
    in terms of public money in investment.'"

    Diradour worked closely with Pantele last fall when the former
    councilman ran unsuccessfully for mayor.

    From his office on North Robinson Street, Diradour argues that the
    proposal to build a stadium in the Bottom is too financially risky for
    city taxpayers.

    "As a lifelong Democrat, a Virginia conservative Democrat . . . I
    cannot stand by while three or four wealthy developers become
    wealthier by pinning their desires to place a baseball stadium where
    they want to on the fiscal backs of the populace of the city of
    Richmond," he said.

    http://www.timesdispatch.com/rtd/news/local /article/SQUA10S_20090509-194008/266784/
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