Toronto Star

Athletes irate over track-reno fund swap

- DONNA SPENCER

CALGARY Provincial money set aside to renovate the sliding track at Calgary’s Canada Olympic Park has been redirected to a day lodge on the park’s public commercial side.

The sliding track that has been the home of national luge, bobsled and skeleton athletes since the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary was closed in 2019 awaiting a $25-million renovation.

The province committed $10 million and the federal government another $7 million to the renovation costs. WinSport, which oversees the park, had to come up with the remaining $8 million.

The park combines public recreation­al facilities with high-performanc­e training and competitio­n spaces.

Alberta’s government announced a commitment of $17.5 million this week — matched by the federal government — toward a renovation of the day lodge at the base of the ski slopes that will cost between $39 million and $43 million.

WinSport confirmed $10 million of the provincial funds came from money originally earmarked for the sliding track.

“With the time frame to use the $10 million from the government of Alberta set to expire, there was no prospect of securing the funding and completing the project in the required time frame,” WinSport president and CEO Barry Heck said Thursday in a statement. “In an effort to keep the funds for capital projects at (Canada Olympic Park), we worked with the government of Alberta to reallocate the $10 million to the day lodge project, WinSport’s highest capital priority, instead of requiring us to return the funds.”

Canadians have won 13 Olympic medals in sliding sports since 1988, including six gold. Justin Kripps piloted Canada to two-man bobsled gold in 2018 and four-man bronze this year in Beijing.

Alex Gough, who earned Canada’s first Olympic medal in luge in 2018 and is now Luge Canada’s president, was dismayed at the redirectio­n of money away from the track without notice from WinSport.

“No one from WinSport even had the decency to reach out and discuss this with the sliding sports,” Gough said. “I have a hard time believing that the executive and the board at WinSport have the best interests of the sliding community at heart.

“We don’t feel the leadership at WinSport has made a real effort to maintain the legacy that the ’88 Games have brought. We hope they can find it in them to be motivated to really uphold that mandate of protecting and preserving that legacy.”

According to WinSport archives, the cost to build the track for 1988 was $18.8 million.

An upper portion of the 36-yearold sliding track, which needs a new refrigerat­ion unit, has been removed. The track is adjacent to an ice house, where sliders practise their starts, and a high-performanc­e training centre. Both were built after 1988 to enhance the Olympic legacy.

Heck insists the track remains on WinSport’s list of capital projects.

“Our capital projects are prioritize­d, and the day lodge has long been our No. 1 priority,” he said in the statement. “The day lodge is critical to WinSport’s year-round operations and the future viability and sustainabi­lity of (the park), affecting hundreds of thousands of annual users and guests, including athletes of all ages and abilities.

“While we appreciate that this is difficult news for the sliding sports community, we are thankful that the government of Alberta agreed to reallocate this money to serve hundreds of thousands of athletes and the community, instead of requiring us to return it.”

Calgary’s sliding track is the only one in the world situated within a large urban centre.

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