Times Colonist

City pledges $450,000 to Indigenous Games

- BILL CLEVERLEY bcleverley@timescolon­ist

If the Songhees Nation wins its bid to host the 2020 North American Indigenous Games, Victoria will contribute $450,000 toward its expenses.

City councillor­s agreed Thursday to provide $225,000 in funding from each of its 2018 and 2019 budget years with the money coming from surplus funds, subject to receipt of a detailed budget breakdown.

They will also encourage neighbouri­ng municipali­ties to fund the games at a comparable level — $2.50 per capita for two years.

Victoria councillor­s endorsed the bid in principle in December, contingent on the Songhees Nation securing senior government funding.

Coun. Marianne Alto, who with Mayor Lisa Helps proposed the city’s contributi­on, said a provincial announceme­nt on funding “is imminent.”

Victoria is competing against Halifax, Ottawa and Winnipeg.

“This is 5,000 athletes and 2,000 support people from their chaperones to their coaches,” Helps said. “This is 7,000 people. Tourism Victoria put in $10,000 to fund the bid work. So this is something that is widely supported by the community and I think as the capital city and as the capital city in the era of reconcilia­tion, I think this is something we can easily support.”

City surpluses over the past five years have ranged between $1.8 million and $4 million, so there’s no worry about the money being available.

Coun. Geoff Young said that $450,000 is “a pretty significan­t chunk.”

“Just because it’s out of surplus it’s no less real,” he said. “It raises the question of whether a 2019 budget surplus is actually a surplus if you’ve already spent it.”

Coun. Margaret Lucas, who manages Hotel Rialto, said the $450,000 investment compared to the economic return “is very light in my mind.” She said: “We’re talking about our restaurant­s, our coffee shops, our hotels. It will be significan­t economic benefit.”

At the games, First Nations youth ages 13 to 19 showcase their athletic abilities. It draws athletes from all Canadian provinces, a third of U.S. states and about 765 Indigenous nations or tribes.

Alto said one of the components of Victoria’s bid will be “a very significan­t cultural festival” that, while still under negotiatio­n, “will absolutely be in the downtown core” and will run for the length of the games.

Coun. Ben Isitt agreed it’s significan­t spending and said he generally favours longer-term investment­s, “but compared to other types of sporting events I think there’s stronger alignment with the city’s objectives in terms of inclusivit­y, reconcilia­tion, and the cultural component is supportabl­e.”

The Songhees Nation in February announced its bid to host the 2020 games. Its games committee anticipate­s $10.4 million in expenses based on those held in Toronto and Cowichan, and in Victoria in 1997, Alto said.

Toronto had an economic benefit in the range of $44 million when it hosted the event in 2017, according to the report presented by Alto and Helps.

For the final bid package, due March 16, the host nation “must include clear expression­s of financial support from their partners,” their report says.

Requests for support have been submitted to all area municipali­ties, the province, the federal government and other potential sponsors.

“Assuming a successful bid, the province has been asked to provide significan­t funding to support the 2020 [games]. The federal government is expected to match this funding,” the report says.

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