The Gold Coast Bulletin

DAWN’S GAMES FEARS

Crichlow adds voice to those who predict traffic gridlock during Games

- DWAYNE GRANT CHIEF GAMES REPORTER

VETERAN Gold Coast City councillor Dawn Crichlow fears the city’s clogged traffic could turn an athlete’s Commonweal­th Games dream into a nightmare.

Cr Crichlow is the first City representa­tive to question organisers’ repeated assertions that the transport system will cope during the Games. “This is (the athletes’) lives we’re talking about … (and) I don’t want to see them stressed.”

Games organisers said they had been working hard to ensure traffic was suitably managed.

ONE of the Gold Coast’s most experience­d councillor­s fears the city’s overwhelme­d road network could turn an athlete’s Commonweal­th Games dream into a nightmare.

In the wake of a festive season where the M1 and major arterials repeatedly struggled to cope with holiday traffic, Cr Dawn Crichlow has become the first City representa­tive to question organisers’ repeated assertions that the transport system will cope during the Games.

The veteran Southport councillor joins the countless residents and local Opposition MPs concerned about potential transport chaos, including Mudgeeraba MP Ros Bates who last week predicted a looming “internatio­nal failure”.

“I think it’s going to be very difficult for those athletes,” Cr Crichlow said. “I really do … if I was an athlete, I’d be a nervous wreck if I got stalled in traffic.

“Even if you’re driving someone to the airport and you know you’ve got to get them there on time, your blood pressure goes up from the stress.

“It would be disastrous if athletes were late for their warm-ups or events … it wouldn’t be good (for the image of our city) but you have to think of the athletes first.

“This is their lives we’re talking about … (and) I don’t want to see them stressed.”

It comes as holiday traffic has wreaked havoc on the M1 this summer break, with the entire strip from Yatala to Coolangatt­a a virtual car park more than three times in the past fortnight.

The chaos overflowed to other main arterial roads across the city, including Bermuda St, Hope Island Rd and Brisbane Rd.

At the time, GOLDOC chairman Peter Beattie insisted strategica­lly timed events and transport plans would ensure the motorway was not gridlocked during the Games.

“What people see of the M1 now isn’t what they’ll see during the Games,” he said at a recent press conference.

“Don’t forget most of the events aren’t held in peak hours ... and you’ve (also) got school holidays.”

Cr Crichlow expressed concerns about events being held at Coomera and Coolangatt­a, claiming former Games chairman Nigel Chamier previously said every venue had to be within a 20-minute drive of the athletes village at Southport.

“I remember clearly one of the councillor­s said ‘what about having (a venue) at Coomera?’ and he said ‘if we put something at Coomera, we may as well do it at Gympie or Toowoomba’,” she said of the man who headed GOLDOC from May 2012 to May 2016.

“He said everything had to be within 20 minutes of the village so that’s a bit of a worry. The goalposts have changed.”

The Coomera Indoor Sports Centre, built in 2015, was part of the original bid, while beach volleyball was added to the Games schedule in May 2016.

“It has always been our priority to provide a stress-free experience for athletes so they can perform at their best,” GOLDOC chief executive Mark Peters said.

He said GOLDOC has been working closely with the City (of Gold Coast) and Transport and Main Roads to ensure traffic is suitably managed during the Games.

 ??  ?? Dawn Crichlow.
Dawn Crichlow.

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