BSP-12 Calgary 2026 Olympic bid in peril after public say ‘No’

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BSP-12

OLY-2026-CAN-CALGARY-POLITICS-WRAP

Calgary 2026 Olympic bid in peril after public say ‘No’

OTTAWA, Nov 14, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Calgary’s bid to stage the 2026 Winter
Olympics suffered a crushing blow on Tuesday as residents of the Canadian
city voted overwhelmingly against hosting the games, early results showed.

In what is almost certain to represent the death knell for Calgary’s bid,
voters in a referendum came out 56.4% to 43.6% against bringing the games
back to the city, 30 years after it staged the 1988 Winter Olympics.

An unofficial tally of 304,774 ballots released by the City of Calgary
showed 171,750 voting against staging the Games, with 132,832 in favour.

The referendum result came after frenzied campaigning which saw pro-bid
campaigners fail to convince Calgary residents that the city should foot a
Can$390 million ($295 million US) chunk of the bill for hosting the event.

Provincial chiefs in Alberta had already warned they would withdraw a
Can$700 million funding commitment if Calgary residents voted against the
Olympics.

Bid officials said bringing the Olympics back to Calgary would provide an
economic boost to the city while giving it a chance to shine under a global
spotlight.

But opponents cast doubt on the projected revenues from the Games, fearing
massive cost overruns, higher property taxes and less funding for other
municipal projects.

Calgary, heavily reliant on the oil sector, has faced difficult economic
times recently, with low prices for Canadian oil and delays in constructing
pipelines to get it to new markets overseas.

The issue of whether to host the Games has gripped the city for the past
two years.

The rejection of the Olympics by Calgary’s public also reflects a global
trend against staging the games in recent years.

In the race for the 2026 Olympics, the Swiss city of Sion and an Austrian
bid based at Graz have already withdrawn, citing lack of either public or
political support.

Several other cities also walked away from the race for the 2022 Winter
Olympics amid public opposition.

An eventual Calgary withdrawal will leave only Milan and Stockholm in the
running when the host city is announced in June in Lausanne, Switzerland.

Ahead of the vote, Mayor Naheed Nenshi urged locals to support the bid,
saying Calgary would get back 10 times more in investment or about Can$4
billion, than it puts into the bid.

“I’m voting yes because I believe Calgary can host the cleanest, most cost
effective games in history. Let’s dream big and vote yes,” he said in a
Twitter message.

In an interview with The Globe and Mail newspaper, Nenshi downplayed
concerns of possible cost overruns, saying the city’s proposal could be
scaled back easily to reduce costs if needed, as it is planning to build only
two new venues while upgrading 11 existing sites.

However supporters of the bid had met with a wall of resistance from well-
organised “No” campaigners. Local media had also voiced opposition, with the
Calgary Sun newspaper rejecting the bid as a misguided attempt to recreate
the feelgood factor from the city’s successful 1988 Olympics.

“We remember 1988 fondly but understand that was a special moment in time
that will never be recaptured,” the paper argued.

“Trying to recreate magical memories is a mug’s game.”

BSS/AFP/MR/ 1140 hrs