Calgary Herald

Be careful comparing 2010 cost to Calgary 2026: Vancouver Games CEO

Furlong says rail line, convention centre were not part of event expenditur­e

- DONNA SPENCER

Now that a new price tag has been put on a possible Calgary bid for the 2026 Olympic and Paralympic Games, a comparison to the most recent games in Canada is inevitable.

The bid corporatio­n Calgary 2026 has put forth a $5.2-billion draft hosting plan that asks for $3 billion in public money from the city, provincial and federal government­s.

The chief executive of the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver and Whistler, B.C., says the $7.7 billion that’s been attached to those Games is inflated, and that the actual cost was closer to $4 billion.

The cost of the rapid transit line from the Vancouver airport to downtown and the constructi­on of a waterfront convention centre shouldn’t be lumped in with Games costs because they were never VANOC’s projects, according to John Furlong.

The B.C. government decided independen­tly of the organizing committee to build them in time for 2010, but the Canada Line and the convention centre were not in VANOC’s bid to the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee or hosting plan, he said.

“When you put these two projects together, you get to over $3 billion,” Furlong told The Canadian Press.

“It’s really easy to add that into the Olympic bid, but it frankly isn’t fair. It was never part of the discussion. It’s a question of what was necessary for us and what wasn’t.”

Whether the taxpayer makes that distinctio­n is another matter.

An obvious theoretica­l comparison would be since Calgary doesn’t have a downtown train link to the airport, and one was built for 2026 with government money even though Calgary 2026 didn’t ask for it, would the taxpayer still consider it a Games cost?

But Furlong doesn’t want VANOC saddled with the $7.7-billion number when the rail line and the convention centre were not considered necessary to hosting the Games.

VANOC had a Games transit plan that didn’t include the rail line.

The media centre was going to be in a $20-million temporary building, but VANOC ended up entering into a business agreement with the province to use the convention centre for media facilities.

“It needs to be explained,” Furlong said. “It’s important to differenti­ate these because the organizing committee in all of this kind of takes a bit of a beating, and it’s not fair.”

An Olympic Games Impact Study for the 2010 Games published by the University of British Columbia in 2013 put Games operating and capital costs at $4.08 billion, and said “Olympic-induced infrastruc­ture projects” were an additional $3.679 billion.

VANOC budgeted about $2.5 billion for operations and capital constructi­on costs.

But since improving the Sea to Sky Highway from Vancouver to Whistler was included in the bid presentati­on to the IOC, Furlong says it is reasonable to include that $600 million and the $900 million spent on security as “Olympic” costs.

“If you were going to include the road and you were going to include security, I wouldn’t be prepared to argue,” he said.

The Calgary Bid Exploratio­n Committee estimated in June 2017 that $4.6 billion would be needed to host the 2026 Winter Olympic Games.

The Calgary 2026 draft hosting plan released earlier this week included $1.1 billion in contingenc­y funds “to mitigate risk.”

The 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, was said to cost $50 billion.

Furlong believes money required for actual Games operations would have been comparable to Vancouver, but because everything else — sport venues, roads, bridges, rail lines and a tunnel — were built from scratch, the total became a number that frightened future potential host cities.

“Calgary is a highly advanced city, infrastruc­ture-wise. So is Vancouver,” he pointed out.

 ??  ?? John Furlong
John Furlong

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