Pan Am mess proves Toronto dodged Olympic bullet
http://www.thestar.com/sports/panam...-am-mess-proves-toronto-dodged-olympic-bullet
When we look at the stalemated mess emerging from the Pan Am Games/Hamilton Tiger-Cat stadium, a familiar nerve is struck here: Thank God Toronto never won an Olympic Games because when a piddly 15,000-seat Pan Am Games stadium is too much for our deepest thinkers to handle properly, imagine what an expensive screw-up the real thing would be.
As Paul Henderson, the former International Olympic Committee member and good friend of amateur athletes, likes to say in one of his many spade-calling moments, “This is what happens once special interests and politicians hijack an athletic event.’’
The only reason, in this opinion, to support the Ontario bid for the 2015 Pan Am Games is for the legacy of athletic facilities they will bring. Both Ontario and Toronto have pretty much ignored amateur athletes over the years, preferring instead to use vast public resources to enrich the billionaire owners of professional sports teams. There was no other possible way to get anything built because amateur sports doesn’t have the bait (such as hockey tickets) to make politicians bend over and grab their ankles.
Ontario athletes used to make up 60 per cent of Canada’s Olympic teams, but it’s below 25 per cent now and shrinking fast. If a young athlete is exceptional, chances are he or she will need to move out of the province, where training opportunities exist to pursue the highest levels.
Now look at the Pan Am fiascos: First, Toronto Mayor David Miller withholds city support unless a swimming venue is granted to the University of Toronto’s Scarborough campus. It had nothing to do with swimming, but was a way to use a premier Pan Am competition to force the federal and provincial governments to fund a rapid-transit line to that part of Scarborough. Except that the transit line won’t be up and running until about a decade after the Games are held — if then. In the meantime, U of T students will pay a tax for swimming pools scheduled to be built atop a former garbage dump that will cost many millions of dollars to clean up. These will be pools the current U of T kids who pay for them will never use, by the way.
Now look to Hamilton, where the mayor there — who demanded track and field events as the price of Hamilton’s participation — is adamant there will be a new waterfront “west harbour’’ stadium. Oh, yes, and the Ticats can move in after the two-week Games fiesta and expand the stadium to their needs. Their consultants say it’s all good.
Except proud Hamiltonian Bob Young, who has thrown plenty of good money after bad to keep the Ticats afloat over the years, says it’s a terrible location for his team and he’ll lose plenty more money. (Young makes it sound as if he’s ready to throw the Ticat keys to the mayor and tell him to start driving.)
Dalton McGuinty put businessmen in charge of the Pan Ams — Roger Garland as chairman of the board and Ian Troop as CEO — because there will be $1.5 billion (and probably much more) of taxpayers’ money at stake. The original Pan Am idea was to translate as much of that as possible into athletic legacy. But already, in order to satisfy outside interests, the two biggest sports, track and swimming, are in dumb locations 100 km apart and a minimum of a solid hour’s travel from the athletes’ village. And one of the outside interests, the Ticats, isn’t close to satisfied.
This thing has barely begun and it’s already screwed up — and it’s only the who-cares Pan Am Games, remember. An Olympics would have been an even bigger mess.