Euphoria
Active Member
Funny, the only funding sources anyone has identified outside of tolls and Olympic private sponsorship is the fare box and the bits of lawn in front of condos that developers are required to provide, with the odd blue light tossed in for the blue steel douchebags and maybe a Stella-inspired ironwork sliver of public art for good measure. You all know as well as I do that the fare box barely, if ever, funds the total operating costs of transit. It never funds the building costs of new projects. So, if the funding for all new infrastructure comes through tax revenue, you're constantly begging levels of government for funding, and if you exceed annual budget lines, guess what, you have to raise taxes. You have to get the public onside for tax increases and we'd hope to exhaust other funding sources first. If the Olympics provide about $4 billion in private sponsorship and event ticket sales, even stripping out a billion for security costs, you're looking at about $3 billion for infrastructure. The only big ticket Olympics-only-related item that we'd have to buy out of that sum is a stadium. Well, stadiums can be leased or sold after construction. I also think there could be other uses, but whatever, people on here seem to hate NFL or old-time style baseball parks, so I won't go there. If done right, that stadium could be iconic, no less than our the CN Tower or Rogers Centre have been. Architecture can be part of the draw. Then there are all of the less tangible but no less important byproducts of hosting an Olympics: bringing the country together through sport, providing a legacy of sports facilities, inspiring future generations to strive for excellence and keep fit, building our profile on the world stage to draw tourism and investment, and speeding up many of the projects we've been wanting to see for a long time: DRL, revamped Gardner, remediation of the Portlands, LRT access to the eastern waterfront. I've said all of this in different ways before, so I apologize for being repetitive, but let's not lose sight of the opportunities here if we get the vision of a bid right. One more thing for the anti-Olympics crowd that expects to use tax money to pay for all of our big infrastructure projects: How will you convince senior levels of government to fund these projects, especially the Feds? If you've ever been out West, out East, Quebec, Alberta, or actually anywhere outside Toronto, there's a fair amount of anti-Toronto sentiment out there, so you better start spamming shiny happy emoticons country-wide.