Smeghead4761 said:
Maybe it would help if people realized that Reed is a graduation venue that we also happen to use for basketball and volleyball.
Reed was at at least 90% capacity for all the graduations. That's probably a bit over 70k parents, relatives, friends, etc, right now spread over 6 events in three days.
If you reduce the capacity, you'd need at least an extra day of graduations, unless you plan on reducing the max number of guests per graduate (currently at 6 - Mom, Dad, and both sets of grandparents. Which Nana doesn't get to see her grandkid graduate if you reduce the guests?)
It was built as a convention center and had an extra donation acting like an endowment dedicated to covering operational costs to get it up and profitable. The plan to get events in that would support ongoing costs was a failure and the endowment went quickly.
The discussion of any kind of event center needs to actually provide multiple areas for meetings from small to huge. There needs to be a crisp discussion on how the school does that better than last time at the very least.
Nothing prevents any decision that makes sense except funding. If Kyle had been re-built as a domed stadium, for instance (or retractable roof), hosting one graduation ceremony would be possible (through not practical) to cover 70K attendees.
I think locking down a specific purpose for Reed that is purely school focused and ignores the opportunity to have a revenue positive sport with 18-20 home games per year as an anchor might be the right balance. More if we can get the WBB program rocking and rolling. And more revenue if we find a way to reconfigure it to do that. Today's Reed really isn't designed to do that. And it isn't an intimate venue for our sports at all (too far from floor, second deck is isolated and doesn't focus noise to the floor.)
I don't actually care what they choose to do as long as the leadership truly leads and is accountable to correct previous processes that came up short. We might have that figured out.