Committee endorses emergency authorization for June 6, 2026 concert at up to $100,000; funding and concessions still being finalized
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The committee unanimously recommended emergency legislation to authorize the director to enter a performance contract for a June 6, 2026 concert at a cost not to exceed $100,000, with staff citing a compressed timeline, pending deposits, possible Miami County Visitor and Convention Bureau support and a planned temporary DORA map expansion.
The Community and Economic Development Committee on Feb. 9 unanimously recommended emergency authorization for the director of public service and safety to sign a performance contract for a June 6, 2026 community concert at a cost not to exceed $100,000.
Mister Tittering, a staff member, said the request grew out of an allocation in the 2026 budget that set aside $100,000 for a singular, large event tied to the city’s America 250 activities. He described a compressed schedule with a little more than three months remaining to secure an act, finalize contracts and put logistics in place, and asked the committee to approve emergency legislation so the city could meet the promoter’s deadlines.
Ken Zeiler, an event organizer who spoke to the committee, described promoter timelines and a contract requirement: "we have to provide them with a 50% deposit," he said, adding organizers must often pay deposits before an act will allow an announcement and before advertising, logistics and security planning can proceed.
Staff detailed proposed operations: the concert would begin with an opening act followed by a main act and would start about 7:30 p.m. at the stadium on June 6; the stage would be placed on the track (not the field), and schools have provided letters of support. Staff said it would pursue a temporary DORA (Designated Outdoor Refreshment Area) application that could expand boundaries to include the stadium area for the event, subject to property-owner permissions.
Private donations and sponsorships were described as anticipated but not yet confirmed. A resident, Matt Breen of Troy, asked whether the act might be "divisive" given other recent controversial halftime shows and whether America 250 would provide federal or state funding. Tittering said he did not believe state or federal grants were involved and that the city expected a small grant through the Miami County Visitor and Convention Bureau; he said he was not aware of political messaging concerns with the band.
The committee moved to "move forward with emergency" authorization; the chair declared the recommendation unanimous. The recommendation will be forwarded to the City Council for formal authorization and any required contracting approvals.
The contract, if approved by council, will likely require an initial deposit and additional logistical approvals including any DORA permit conditions and vendor/concession planning.
