City staff presented a wide-ranging discussion about whether and how Menifee might support a regional sports facility, from trail-oriented uses at Menifee Hills to indoor, tournament-ready complexes that can draw regional visitors.
Mariana Mitchell, Community Services Director, said there is no single model for a regional sports complex: facilities can be publicly owned and operated, privately developed, or built through public–private partnerships. She highlighted local assets — Menifee Hills (nearly 400 acres of open space), Gale Webb Action Sports Park (about 40,000 annual visits) and a conceptual Menifee Valley Sports Park (about 16 acres planned in a specific plan) — and described a market-opportunity report showing an all-in indoor/outdoor facility could cost as much as $130 million and require up to 90 acres, excluding land-acquisition costs.
A member of the public, Quacy Childress, described a privately proposed 10-court indoor complex called the Dynasty Sports Complex and said his group estimates the facility would cost about $75 million and would meet local demand for practice and tournament space.
Council members emphasized that building a large regional facility would be a long-term effort. Several members urged prioritizing Menifee Hills for outdoor/regional recreation and using Quimby/park-dedication policy and partnership incentives to secure land or amenities as development proceeds.
What’s next: Council directed staff to keep the sports-facility discussion active on the workplan, explore public–private partnerships and the Valley-Wide parks annexation, and return with further policy and financing options.