This isn’t just any random number. For one thing, it is the population of
Memphis, TN. It is the number of feet
in 131 miles. It is the number of
minutes in one year and four months. It
is the cost of the new football stadium scoreboard at our local public high
school. It is the number of square
kilometers in the state of Texas.
Wait…what? Yes I said that right.
It IS the cost of the new football stadium scoreboard at our local public high
school. No not the cost of the football
stadium, the cost of the scoreboard.
In case you missed it, that number was $695,391.00.
There are a variety of things one could think or feel upon
hearing this. Perhaps shock,
incredulity, even anger, but if your reaction was something more along the
lines of pride or envy, I’ll give you a warning, this won’t be pleasant for
you. The first thing I have to come to
terms with is that, being on the wrong side of a popular way of thinking
immediately puts me in the category of “kook”, “closed-minded”, or the ole’ “poor
thing just doesn’t get it”. As if the
fact that I disagree with the populace must mean that I am an angry, bitter
radical that hates any form of fun. But
the truth is, I have had more fun with this particular subject than I’ve had in
a long time. In fact, thinking about
spending nearly $700,000 on a high school field scoreboard makes me laugh till
I get the hiccups. Since there are
roughly 85,000 people in this town, one can assume that there are roughly
85,000 differing opinions on the topic. Mine
is just one of those.
There is the obvious opposition to spending $695,391.00 on a
freakishly oversized metal structure with LED readouts that displas the score
for all of twelve varsity and JV football home games a year. The opposition might make the point that
since the national average salary for a high school teacher is $43,000 a year,
the school could employ many more teachers for that $695,391.00. Just in case you got more math practice
watching the scoreboard at football games than in your math class, it means the
school could employ 16 additional high school teachers for a year. OR every teacher in the entire district could
receive a $750.00 Christmas bonus. Maybe
with that money, a program could be funded that teaches parents the importance
of being fully engaged in their children’s education and not simply their
extra-curricular activities. Heck, we
could hire scantily clad Hooter’s girls to strut around carrying huge number cards
to display the score, for a fraction of the cost of this scoreboard……and it
would make more sense.
What is not so obvious is the subtle, slow, creeping
acceptance that it is not only OK, but that it is necessary to spend this kind
of money on something so insignificant.
Yes I said insignificant. Let’s
be painfully honest for a moment. In the
big picture of life, the scoreboard at your high school’s football field is not
likely to be included in many of the defining moments of your life. If it is, then you should seriously think
about broadening your horizons. Awkward!
Again, let me reiterate that it is not High School football
that I have a problem with. Actually I
love it. The screaming fans, the
marching bands, the rivalry, the sense of community. The old drunk fat guy with boundary issues
sitting behind you. The smell of pot
smoke wafting up from underneath the bleachers.
These are the things that make America great. BUT, I fear that spending $695,391.00 on a
scoreboard cheapens the game, makes a mockery of it, says to the opposing team,
“we can’t seem to make our team be any better, but boy howdy look at our
scoreboard”. Why not spend a measly $100,000 on a
scoreboard and the other $590,000.00 on something that makes more sense, like
heated stadium seats or valet parking. I
know this seems pretty absurd, but sometimes it takes the absurd to illustrate
the absurd. By my kooky, closed-minded,
confused way of thinking, not much is more absurd than building a high school
football scoreboard that costs (say it with me now) $695,391.
I acknowledge the proponent’s justification that the money
was donated by sponsoring corporations as well as other donations and not from
tax-payer dollars. They will also say
that the football program is a big draw for other sponsors and therefore the
money spent was worth it. Or that the behemoth collection of glowing lights
will flash images of advertisements so large and bright that people prone to
seizures will have to look away, and those advertisements will eventually pay
for the scoreboard. As soon as my
wide-eyed, open-mouthed stare at their silly justifications has passed, I
realize that laughter is the only logical reaction. So there ya have it. I may be finished with this particular rant,
but this is far from over. I will
periodically be reporting in on all the things that one can do with $695,391.00
that WON’T make our town appear that we are showing out, or overcompensating,
or simply saying, “mine is bigger than yours”.
Interpret that however you want.
I was talking about the scoreboard.
I get "kooky" about this kind of stuff too. I suppose if we were wealthier we might have a better understanding of this kind of extreme, outrageous, overboard, unreasonable, and wasteful extravagance. haha (I love my thesaurus :)
ReplyDeleteI almost forgot how funny you are. Keep writing!
All my kids have gone to BA from Pre-K on and I've attended many, many games and I love it. However, the older and crankier I get, the more I see a need to build stands for fans that actually go there to watch the games instead of trying to watch from behind an endless wave of students that have nothing better to do than worm their way in-and-out, through, around and between the stadium to keep up with their friends. Better yet, why not use the money to build a huge cage that gets locked at the beginning of the game and unlocked afterward. Call it the "student section." But on a seriously sarcastic note, maybe the Tigers should actually win some championships, or at least beat Jenks and Union on even a semi-regular basis before spending that kind of money on a scoreboard that does the same thing as a $.99 app on my smartphone! I mean, why have a larger, more visible scoreboard to advertise a score you may not be proud of? Hmm. On second thought, it would be more convenient for the local sports casters to just climb up on the nearest rooftop and view the score from Tiger Field instead of visiting and reporting in person.
ReplyDeleteAnd just another quick thought - probably the most important thought of this reply - if they did decide to use that money for teachers instead of it's intended purpose, think of all the kids could actually interpret all the information on any scoreboard because a teacher would be there offering an education instead.