The Peterborough Examiner

Calgary can be confident for Olympic vote

- DONNA SPENCER

CALGARY — The leap of faith Calgarians are asked to make about the 2026 Winter Games isn’t as big as the one Vancouveri­tes navigated for 2010, says John Furlong.

Calgarians will go to the polls Nov. 13 to answer the question of whether they want to host the 2026 Games, as Vancouver did Feb. 22, 2003, for the 2010 Games.

Furlong, who co-led the 2010 bid and organizing committee, says not only does Calgary own previous experience hosting a Winter Olympics that Vancouver didn’t have, he envies the $1.1 billion in contingenc­y funds in Calgary’s draft host plan.

“If you’d handed me that budget, I would have slipped out the back door and said ‘Thank you very much. I’m on my way’,” Furlong told The Canadian Press on Friday.

“I have never seen a budget that has this much contingenc­y in it. I think that’s a direct learning from Vancouver.”

The B.C. government was the guarantor against a financial deficit from the 2010 Games held in both in Vancouver and Whistler.

The global financial crisis after Vancouver won the bid had VANOC, the organizing committee, scrambling to stay out of a debt position, Furlong said.

The 2010 Games were said to have broken even. While the cost of hosting those games was roughly $4 billion, the B.C. government’s spending on a rail line to the airport and a convention centre completed in time for the games brought the total to $7.7 billion.

No order of government — federal, provincial or municipal — has provided a financial guarantee yet against deficits for hosting the 2026 Games, which has been estimated to cost $5.1 billion.

The weighty contingenc­y fund essentiall­y provides that insurance, Furlong said.

But the organizati­on No Calgary Olympics is not as confident in the Calgary bid corporatio­n’s contingenc­y figure.

“Frankly with the way the numbers have been moving around, and we’re seven years out from 2026, I have no assurance we have solid numbers and solid contingenc­y to protect Calgarians,” Erin Waite said.

“I don’t know if $1.1 billion is enough, and I would say they don’t know either.”

In Vancouver’s plebiscite, the “yes” vote prevailed with 64 per cent in favour to 36 per cent against. About 46 per cent of the city’s eligible voters cast their ballot.

The Alberta government made a Calgary plebiscite a condition of its bid funding and is providing $2-million to hold the vote.

Mail-in ballots have gone out. Advance voting is Tuesday and Wednesday.

The decision to green light a 2026 bid is ultimately in the hands of city council, which almost cancelled the plebiscite, which would have essentiall­y killed a bid, in a close vote earlier this week.

While the result of Calgary’s plebiscite is non-binding, it will influence council’s decision at the next off-ramp.

Furlong was initially dead set against a plebiscite.

He and the late Jack Poole spent months constructi­ng a bid when a mayoral candidate made a referendum on the 2010 Games an election promise.

“We went from being not in favour of the plebiscite to just simply taking the position in actual fact it might give us an advantage,” Furlong recalled.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? John Furlong says he would have loved to have the $1.1 billion in contingenc­y funds built into the Calgary 2026 draft host plan.
JONATHAN HAYWARD THE CANADIAN PRESS John Furlong says he would have loved to have the $1.1 billion in contingenc­y funds built into the Calgary 2026 draft host plan.

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