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Postcards from the Northern Tour: Whitehorse – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009

Arriving in Whitehorse was a strong reminder our team was far from Vancouver. Even the locals had to admit it was colder weather than normal at -43 degrees Celsius.

The team attended a breakfast with their colleagues working and volunteering for the 2007 Canada Winter Games (CWG) being held in Whitehorse from February 23-March 10. These Games are a stepping stone for our young athletes hoping to one day represent team Canada at the Olympic Winter Games. John Furlong and Donna Wilson inspired the CWG team and encouraged them to stay focused on the delivery of a great event.

Later that morning the team visited an artist co-op just outside Whitehorse. They toured the facility and met with local artists, some of whose works have been commissioned to provide artwork for the CWG, demonstrating the economic benefits and cultural showcasing opportunities these major events can bring to a community.

The Kwanlin Dun First Nation greeted the team with a welcome dance performed by local children drumming in traditional dress. After, they enjoyed a lunch featuring caribou, bison and bannock. 

The team then visited a school and took in traditional sport demonstrations, participated in the game of stick-handling and John had a chance to talk to some of the students about how to set goals and work hard to achieve their dreams. VANOC was very honoured to receive the gift of a beautiful button blanket.

After a welcome song performed by Linda Harvey of the Kwanlin Dun First Nation, the team assembled with others at the Transportation Museum in Whitehorse to discuss tourism initiatives in the North.

The team is now on its way to Yellowknife for the next stop on their Northern Canada adventure.

Check back soon for more reports from the next stop.

Vancouver 2010

Postcards from the Northern Tour: Yellowknife – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009

Touchdown in Yellowknife. It was a short stay in the Northwest Territories, but the VANOC team members made good use of their time, connecting with many local business, sport and youth audiences.

John Furlong gave a talk over breakfast at the Yellowknife Chamber of Commerce. Many Yellowknifers were keen to hear how they can give their input to VANOC organizers to get involved in Canada’s Games.

Yellowknife residents are working hard to stage successful games of their own: they are hosting the Arctic Games in 2008 – an event that combines friendly competition and the sharing of cultural values involving participants from circumpolar regions around the world. John emphasized how the Arctic Games, like the Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, are a celebration of winter, with similar goals and values:

  • To stage excellent athletic competitions and cultural celebrations
  • To enhance our communities.
  • To welcome athletes, volunteers, coaches, dignitaries and media from around Canada and the world.
  • To demonstrate the values of fair play, respect and teamwork.

Meanwhile, VANOC’s Donna Wilson and Lara Mussell-Savage paid a visit to Sir John Franklin High School. Schoolmates from St. Patrick’s were also in attendance as Donna and Lara spoke to about 50 grade 10, 11 and 12 students. It was a great success. All of the students were athletes and enthusiastically held an Olympic Games torch. The students were particularly fired up over Lara’s motivational story about her sport dreams and to represent Canada in competition.

The team boarded the plane to Kulgluktuk Thursday morning right after these two events. It was a brief visit, but the team was very pleased with the relationships they started in Yellowknife, and excited to see what Kugluktuk, Nunavut has to offer.

Stay tuned for the last update for the Northern Canada Tour.

Vancouver 2010

Postcards from the Northern Tour: Kugluktuk – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009

Strong cross-winds and nearly minus 50 degree Celsius temperatures couldn’t thwart the team’s much anticipated touchdown in Kugluktuk Thursday.

John and the team were greeted at the tiny airport by Nunavut Premier Paul Okalik and many community members. School children wore traditional dress and performed traditional drumming, dancing and singing.

After muskox burgers for lunch at the Jimmy Hikok Ilihakvik Elementary school, some kids were very excited to recognize VANOC’s Lara Mussell-Savage. The grade seven students met Lara when they travelled to the 2010 Information Centre in Whistler in October 2005 to build a traditional inukshuk as a gift for VANOC with rocks they brought all the way from Nunavut (read the story on the Aboriginal Youth Cultural Sharing Day for more details). At the assembly, VANOC was delighted to present the school with a donation of lacrosse equipment as a thank you for their journey to Whistler.

The rest of Thursday was filled with a tour of the town, a trip to the elders’ centre for some bannock and tea and a community square dance. The team was delighted by the elders who played the drums and sang – telling stories of their songs and answering all of John Furlong’s many questions. At the dance, the team was entertained by square dancers of all ages. The elders have no worry about this tradition carrying forward in this community – it’s tough to get the youth off the dance floor! The whole VANOC team participated in the square dancing and all enjoyed the lesson.

After a farewell pancake breakfast on Friday, there was an exchange of gifts. John presented the Premier with a Vancouver 2010 flag and, in exchange, John received a gorgeous carving of a polar bear from the Premier who spoke kind words about John being a true friend of the people in the Far North. 

Following the breakfast, talented young athletes (many of which were past Arctic Winter Games competitors) performed a demonstration of traditional sports, including the two foot high kick, the one foot high kick, the finger pull and the head pull. These sports require no special equipment, but much athletic ability. Two athletes from the group will be going to the 2007 Canada Winter Games in Whitehorse to compete in table tennis. 

The weather won out on the group’s quest to find inuksuit in the wild. However, the team received numerous small, hand-made versions from kids in the community which VANOC will cherish for years to come. 

 As our team heads home, many thanks are owed to everyone in the north who helped us make this tour a great success. Vancouver 2010 is excited to see and share so much enthusiasm for Canada’s Games!

Vancouver 2010

The spirit of "Canada’s Games" is celebrated at Aboriginal Youth Cultural Sharing Day – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009

Whistler – Visitors to the Vancouver 2010 Info Centre in Whistler today got a chance to experience the spirit of “Canada’s Games”. Aboriginal communities from two of Canada’s three coasts came together to share and celebrate their cultures and their commitment to making the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games truly a Canada-wide experience. Aboriginal Youth Cultural Sharing Day emerged out of good timing, youthful enthusiasm and commitment to a goal.

When the Vancouver 2010 emblem was unveiled, the Grade 6 students of Jimmy Hikok Ilihakvik (Elementary School) in Kugluktuk, Nunavut, were busy fundraising for a school trip to Vancouver. With a population of only 1,400 (see attached backgrounder), fundraising for such an ambitious project was not an easy task. But the children were inspired by the Inukshuk emblem and their teacher, Catherine Minshull, called VANOC, offering to share the Inuit experience of the Inukshuk during their visit to the Lower Mainland.

This afternoon, the nineteen Grade 6 students from Kugluktuk, Nunavut, demonstrated their tradition of Inukshuk building on the deck at the 2010 Info Centre. They have left the 1.5 metre tall sculpture as a gift for VANOC and Whistler, to share with all who visit the Info Centre between now and 2010. Suzie Akana Powers, a 12 year-old student from Kugluktuk said, “I feel great. I didn’t realize until today that this was the most important part of the trip. We got to see a lot of people and build an Inukshuk as part of friendship”.

Youth Ambassadors from the Squamish and Lil’wat Nations shared their cultures with the Nunavut guests, welcoming them with drumming and songs. Youth from the Tseil-Waututh Nation and the Iswahl Dance Group from Mt. Currie also participated by sharing songs, drumming and dancing. A pen pal program was initiated so that the youth from Northern Canada could stay connected to young adults who are actively engaged in 2010 Games-related programs and events through the Four Host First Nations Secretariat.

More than 400 people enjoyed the event, including many families from the Sea to Sky corridor. Lois Joseph, Iswahl Dance leader and teacher at the Xit’olacw Community School in Mt.Currie expressed her enthusiasm for the day, saying, “This is something that is really awesome. It’s one of the first times that First Nations are directly involved with the Olympic Games. It’s great to share each of our communities’ songs and dances and yet feel that we are all the same in heart.”

Aboriginal youth from two of Canada’s coasts, 1900 kilometres apart, came together to share their cultures with a Whistler audience from around the region and across the country. The Aboriginal Youth Cultural Sharing Day was a stellar example of how the Olympic and Paralympic Games movement inspires young people to get engaged and demonstrated the cultural impact of hosting “Canada’s Games” in 2010.

About VANOC

VANOC is responsible for the planning, organizing, financing and staging of the XXI Olympic Winter Games and the X Paralympic Winter Games in 2010. The 2010 Olympic Winter Games will be staged in Vancouver and Whistler from February 12 to 28, 2010. Whistler will host the Paralympic Winter Games from March 12 to 21, 2010.

Media contact

VANOC Communications
mediarelations@vancouver2010.com

Vancouver 2010

Tools for Life and the RONA Vancouver 2010 Fabrication Shop Video – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009

Louie Naknakin has a personal connection to the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games. Not as an athlete, not as a sports fan, but as a carpenter who builds items such as ski racks, wheelchair ramps and medal podiums for the Games.

Naknakin, 25, is one of 16 carpentry trainees at the RONA Vancouver 2010 Fabrication (Fab) Shop, a 30-week carpentry skills and work experience program that began in November, 2007. For people who have had difficultly attaching to the workforce, the Fab Shop equips them with tools for life.

By 2010, 64 trainees will have received Fab Shop skills training and job experience. The first of four training groups focuses on urban youth.

“This Fab Shop program is a real good thing especially if people aren’t in the workforce and they’re looking to get into it,” said Naknakin. “It’s the perfect learning step.”

The Fabrication Shop is also an essential woodworking facility for the Games — it’s where all the extra items that bring the Games venues to life will be built. By 2010, the Fabrication Shop and its carpentry trainees will have produced more than 8,000 Games-time items.

RONA, a National Partner of the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC), took a leading role in planning the Fab Shop and provided skilled labour to retrofit what was previously a storage facility into the workshop space. RONA also hired the supervising carpenters, covers the lease costs and provides all equipment and materials.

The program is taught by a Red Seal-certified carpentry instructor, three supervising carpenters and will be certified by the Industry Training Authority (ITA), the agency overseeing BC’s industry training and apprenticeship system. Hours worked in the Fabrication Shop will apply towards first year carpentry qualification requirements.

Naknakin and his older brother Albert Naknakin, who is also a trainee of the Fab Shop, hope to eventually complete their four-year Red Seal certification in carpentry and together build homes for themselves on Vancouver Island.

Building a future

Tradeworks Training Society — a non-profit organization located in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside that provides job and life skills training — recruited the first 16 program participants and will assist graduates in securing apprenticeship positions. 

Rod Paynter is the Tradeworks job and life skills coach for the Fab Shop. He helps trainees to gain the confidence and focus on goals in and out of the workshop. And as the program progresses, Paynter sees students making changes for a healthier lifestyle.

“I notice people are eating more regularly than they were when they first got here,” said Paynter. “Some of them are getting into better housing than they had — and they can afford better housing since they’re receiving steady income during the program.”

VANOC’s Overlay team manages the Fab Shop and built flexibility into their own production schedules to accommodate a complete change of trainees approximately every seven months.

ACCESS — a non-profit agency delivering services to the urban Aboriginal community — will recruit and support the second group of 16 Fabrication Shop trainees.

Pride in Accomplishment

For Naknakin the idea of seeing his finished pieces being put to use during the 2010 Winter Games inspires a sense of pride.

“It will be cool to see the stuff that we made for the Olympics during the Games,” said Naknakin. “Like, for instance, the gun racks for the biathlon and that kind of stuff — you can actually point at it when it’s on television and say, ‘Yeah, I made that.’”

A Fab Shop Video

In November 2007, 16 young people walked into the new RONA Vancouver 2010 Fabrication Shop and strapped on tool belts to help build the Games. Fab Shop is not just a workshop though; it’s a classroom where participants solve math problems and learn the nuts and bolts of carpentry. The goal is to build skills for long-term employment.

To help tell their story in video, VANOC contracted Intersections Media, an organization providing mentoring, training and experience in film and video production for youth with limited access to resources. With mentoring from professional filmmakers, Intersections Media participants narrated and edited the Fab Shop video and provided camera and sound support.

View the video

 

Nothing Goes To Waste

The Fabrication Shop will have a permanent impact on the lives of all the people who work and learn within its walls. But Games products are built for specific Games-time purposes and will be removed and reused, or recycled, after the Games. Even the screws will be reused. Nothing will go to waste.

“Sustainability is very big at VANOC,” said Mark Hetherington, RONA Vancouver 2010 Fabrication Shop Manager. “We’re always thinking how we can reduce or reuse materials and, for that reason, we’re screwing everything together. We’re not gluing it, we’re not nailing it unless we really have to, so that everything can be taken apart and all the materials are recycled and reused elsewhere.”

Partial funding support for this carpentry training and work experience program was provided by Human Resources and Social Development Canada and the provincial Industry Training Authority.

Vancouver 2010

Sustainability and the Games – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009

The word sustainability can mean many things to many people. For the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC), sustainability means managing the social, economic and environmental impacts and opportunities of our Games to produce lasting benefits — locally and globally. By taking responsibility for reducing negative impacts and generating benefits for the natural environment, people and target communities, Aboriginal people, and the economy, we are walking our talk and focusing on raising awareness and promoting sustainable living choices.

Today, VANOC released the second of five public Sustainability Reports detailing its progress on a wide range of sustainability initiatives. This latest report specifies VANOC’s goals, interactions with key stakeholder groups, sustainability performance and highlights some of the challenges the Organizing Committee faced between August 1, 2006 and July 31, 2007. The Report also highlights some of the success stories that have stemmed from the sustainability initiatives of VANOC and its related partners, sponsors and stakeholders.

“The Organizing Committee has taken its sustainability commitments to heart and the report features many of the large and small actions taken. It’s exciting for our team to be able to profile the innovative solutions and developments so many have come together on,” said Ann Duffy, VANOC’s corporate sustainability officer. “We heard from our stakeholders about what they liked and didn’t like about our first report and made changes to better serve their interests.”

Snapshot on sustainability

For a quick read, VANOC has also produced a snapshot, or summary, of the 2006-07 Sustainability Report. The snapshot features performance highlights and shorter stories for those interested in getting a flavour for what VANOC is up to on the sustainability front.

From carefully uprooting and relocating plants in construction areas of Cypress Mountain (freestyle skiing and snowboard venue), to reusing waste heat at Hillcrest/Nat Bailey Stadium Park (home to curling and wheelchair curling) and the Olympic and Paralympic Villages in both Vancouver and Whistler, VANOC is seeking ways to minimize its environmental footprint.

By fostering entrepreneurial spirit, the Four Host First Nations (FHFN), the Province of British Columbia and the Government of Canada hosted the Tourism British Columbia 2010 Aboriginal Business Summit in Vancouver, in February 2007. More than 400 First Nations, Inuit and Métis leaders and business people attended the workshops on construction, procurement, arts and culture, retail and licensing, and Aboriginal tourism opportunities. As a natural next step, in early March VANOC and the FHFN launched the Vancouver 2010 Aboriginal Licensing and Merchandising Program aimed at showcasing original works of Aboriginal art and products.

While other Organizing Committees have integrated green policies into their procurement frameworks, VANOC is the first to fully incorporate environmental, social, ethical and Aboriginal criteria. Additionally, VANOC established a Licensee Code of Conduct procedure and program to ensure licensed merchandise is produced in a socially-responsible manner, anywhere on the planet.

Impactful programs

VANOC is furthering its sustainability initiatives and learning what can be achieved going forward. When the sport and cultural events of Vancouver 2010 have come and gone, today’s sustainability initiatives will ensure a better tomorrow for future generations.

“Our world is changing every day, and while the 2010 Winter Games are just a dot on the landscape, in the overall scheme of things, we believe they can demonstrate how sport and sustainable practices can advance well-being — environmentally, socially and economically,” wrote John Furlong in his Message from the CEO. “By 2010 we want to be able to show the world what’s possible when people come together on critical issues.”

For further information, the Vancouver 2010 Sustainability Report 2006-07 is available here.

Vancouver 2010

Championing environmental legacies – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009

Athletes, there’s a new winner on the podium.

Jacques Rogge, president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) was recently declared a “Champion of the Earth.”

At a ceremony in Singapore on April 19, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) honoured Rogge as a “ Champion of the Earth 2007”, a nod to the IOC’s remarkable success in implementing rigorous environmental standards for Olympic bid and host cities. Rogge was one of seven award recipients, a group that also included Al Gore, former US Vice President, Senator and presidential candidate.

Linking sport and environment
According to IOC Sport and Environment Commission chairman Pál Schmitt, the IOC’s earth-friendly mandate can have immense trickle-down influence. Indeed, the state of the environment in a Games host city affects athletes, volunteers, the worldwide audience of spectators and citizens alike.

As quoted by Schmitt in the IOC Guide on Sport, Environment and Sustainable Development, “Sport and sustainable development are deeply interlinked and increasingly need to be addressed jointly.”

“The Olympic Movement and the [IOC] in particular therefore have a role to play in the field of environmental protection and sustainable development to ensure that present and future generations will be able to enjoy sports activities in a preserved socio-economic, healthy and natural environment,” said Schmitt.

Sport and Culture are the two traditional pillars of the Games. Interest and concern for the environment was addressed by the Olympic Movement during the 1994 Centennial Olympic Congress, Congress of Unity meetings (regular consultative meetings convened by the IOC and attended by Olympic Movement parties’ representatives) in Paris when, for the first time, the International Olympic Committee formally acknowledged environmental and sustainable development as part of its overall mandate.

These discussions evolved and resulted in the creation of the IOC Sport and Environment Commission in 1995. By 1999, the IOC had adopted its own version of the UN’s Agenda 21 for Sustainable Development. It called for a program of action aimed at using sport to advance sustainable development and established a formal collaboration between the IOC and the UN Environment Program (UNEP) upon its implementation. One of the objectives of adopting sustainable development into the Olympic Movement includes improving Games-based practices on environmental conservation and impact on natural resources.

Minimizing the environmental footprint
Vancouver’s bid to host the 2010 Winter Games integrated environmental, social and economic sustainability as part of its Games planning. On the environmental platform, the Vancouver 2010 Bid Corporation committed, if successful in its bid, to building and operating Games facilities that would ensure a minimal environmental footprint.

“In the Bid Phase, in recognition of the regional environment, and with the focus on green buildings, both in Vancouver and the Sea-to-Sky corridor, we wanted to live up to the expectations of what was going on around us,” said Tina Symko, a sustainability coordinator with the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC). “We wanted to play a role in leading the way in green building design and standards.”

Leading the way
VANOC is on track and working hard on its environmental goals and objectives, but the organizing committee can’t do it alone. In efforts to achieve

these objectives, VANOC has had early coordination with its government partners which include Canada, British Columbia, Vancouver and Whistler.  There is great commitment from all partners to ensure venue siting, construction and operation, selection of equipment and transportation, consumption of energy and water, pollution and waste management, species and habitat conservation are all considered in the planning, design and construction of its venues. Because of this partnership, the Games is able to minimize much of its environmental footprint by utilizing Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) green building design principles for new and existing venues.

LEED incorporates design, construction and operational practices that combine healthy, high-quality and high-performance advantages with reduced environmental impacts. The LEED green building rating and certification program provides an opportunity for third party validation of green building design and operational practices. Improved building performance is certified with ratings (certified, silver, gold or platinum) based on the total number of points earned by a given project.

Aiming for silver, striking gold
VANOC committed to certify its new sport venues to a minimum LEED Silver level standard of certification. This past March, however, the Vancouver 2010 headquarters achieved gold-level LEED Commercial Interiors (CI) certification.

Much effort was made from many parties to achieve this certification. The City of Vancouver showed great support for this initiative and contributed to the Gold rating by improving the water efficiency with upgrades to the washroom, improving the thermal monitoring in the replacement of building controls and optimizing energy performance with the installation of daylight-responsive controls in areas close to the windows.

VANOC sponsors also played a very important role. Energy performance was further optimized with the selection of Top Sponsor GE Energy Star-rated equipment and appliances in the kitchenettes on each floor. Official Supplier Haworth provided some systems furniture and office seating that was Green guard indoor air-quality certified.

Other office renovations included: increased natural light, reducing the demand for lighting fixtures by 40 to 50 per cent; installation of energy-saving fixtures; use of recycled materials; and a carpet “tile” system that allows for the replacement of only certain tiles as needed, rather than re-carpeting entire rooms.

Finally, in addition to the renovations and furnishings, there are recycling and compost streaming systems on every floor, where VANOC staff have contributed to this gold level through their waste management efforts and cleaning systems. From partners to sponsors to staff and volunteers, everyone involved is very proud of the success of their efforts in achieving LEED-CI Gold.

The Vancouver 2010 offices are VANOC’s first completed LEED project to date, but the eco-initiatives don’t stop there.

Many of the Vancouver 2010 competition and non-competition venues are being constructed and upgraded to minimize environmental impacts. The Whistler Olympic and Paralympic Village will be strategically situated adjacent to a former municipal landfill to allow for the capture and re-use of methane gas. Heat produced by the nearby municipal wastewater treatment system will also be captured for re-use. At the City of Vancouver’s Hillcrest/Nat Bailey Stadium Park curling venue, waste heat from the refrigeration plant will be used to heat other building spaces and the nearby aquatic centre. Also, at the Richmond Oval, rainwater will be re-used for irrigation, ice-making and toilet flushing. There are also plans for the construction of an onsite wetland for storm water treatment at the site.

Going Green in Beijing
Beijing, host of the 2008 Olympic Summer Games, is also striving for eco-innovation. As with any event of this magnitude, hosting the Olympic and Paralympic Games could be seen as a strain on Beijing’s infrastructure and resources. According to the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG), however, hosting the Games is a prime opportunity, and yet another good reason, for the city of Beijing to change its environmental practices for the better.

Beijing is a rapidly developing city and home to approximately 15 million people. Despite obvious challenges, the Beijing Organizing Committee has successfully expanded its environmental initiatives and the City of Beijing has joined in efforts to improve the city with better transportation, more green space and moving some industry out of the city core.

Admittedly the biggest test for BOCOG is to help the city of Beijing reduce air pollution produced by the city’s high proportion of coal consumption and rising popularity of automobile use. In efforts to minimize additional air pollutants, the Beijing municipal government, with assistance from BOCOG, has enacted phase-by-phase measures including improved dust control at construction sites and public awareness campaigns about the benefits of tree planting. Slated for completion by late 2007, Beijing has a campaign to plant 12,000 hectares of trees in an effort to increase the green coverage of the urban area to 43 per cent.

BOCOG’s Construction and Environment Department has also adopted significant innovative technologies during Games preparations. At the Olympic Village, for example, builders installed 6,000 square metres of solar heat collectors on building roofs; they’ll supply hot water to all apartment bathrooms and support facilities at Games time. The Olympic Village will also use recycled water from the Qinghe River Wastewater Treatment Plant to meet the needs of air conditioning systems for all Olympic Village apartments. And when it comes to recycling, construction of the roadbed within Beijing’s Olympic Village used 8,000 tonnes of waste steel scraps.

Greening the Future
Beyond creating healthy legacies for the people of Beijing, the Beijing Organizing Committee hopes to live up to its slogan of ‘One World One Dream’ by setting an example for the world to follow.

For future host cities, living up to their environmental aspirations from bid to Games ensures healthy environmental legacies long after the Torch is passed. Ideally, values such as the Games spirit will spread throughout the world’s nations, instilling a respect for the environment that binds us all together as strongly as the passion for sport.

Vancouver 2010

Civic pride, unity, a key legacy for Salt Lake 2002 Winter Games – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009
Human legacy tops economic and other benefits, says former CEO

The third volume of a report commissioned by the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) shows how the legacies of the largest sport program in the history of the Olympic Winter Games created unparalleled pride and unity, turned a profit and left behind a legacy of world class venues and an environmental blueprint for future Games to follow.

“The legacy we hold dear in Salt Lake City includes the heart-felt memories of a time when everyone in our community came together to host the world,” says former Salt Lake 2002 Organizing Committee (SLOC) CEO Fraser Bullock. “We remember the awe-inspiring stories of the athletes and the message to our rising generation of what is possible. We have permanent facilities that are not only world-class, but are utilized every day by our citizens and are training the next generation of Olympians. Economic development increased through a permanent increase in the level of tourism and businesses relocating to our State. Finally, we have the legacy of being an Olympic City and everything that is associated with that special title among cities” he said.

The Salt Lake Report, which was released today on vancouver2010.com, is the final volume of the Legacies of North American Olympic Winter Games report commissioned by VANOC. The first two volumes ( Lake Placid and Calgary) were released April 30 and May 7 respectively; an executive summary will be released the week of May 21.

Among the many economic and environmental legacies identified in the Salt Lake report are the following:

  • The Salt Lake Olympic Winter Games was held less than six months after the terrorist attacks in the U.S. on September 11th, at a time when the American economy was in a recession and travelers were jittery about air travel. Nevertheless, the Games turned a profit of 0 million.
  • The Games produced 35,000 job-years of employment, an income of .5 billion, infrastructure investment of 5 million, visitor spending of 3 million, and a net revenue to state and local government of million.
  • Olympic Games-related construction and employment cushioned the state of Utah against the dramatic economic falls being experienced elsewhere in the United States in the months up to and following 9/11.
  • More than 100,000 trees were planted in Utah, and 15 million worldwide, in keeping with SLOC’s commitment to environmental conservation. During the Games, SLOC recycled or composted 95.6 percent of the Games’ waste.
  • As of August, 2005, Outside magazine was talking about Salt Lake City as “one of [its] 18 towns that have it all.” In an article called Where to Live Now, Outside described the city as “gradually wriggling itself into the environmental forefront…. Light rail lines, christened just in time for the 2002 Winter Olympics, reduce auto traffic by funneling 44,000 riders a day in and out of downtown, while the SLC sewage treatment plant turns released methane in to electricity to help run itself.”

VANOC CEO John Furlong said “Salt Lake City has shown how it is possible to take an environmental approach in planning for the Games. In addition to their financial success and their remarkable venue legacies we can look at Salt Lake’s performance with growing confidence that our sustainability legacies can be achieved as well,” he concluded.

Cathy Priestner Allinger, VANOC Executive Vice President, Sport, Paralympic Games and Venue Management commented on Salt Lake’s legacies for sport noting, “VANOC is encouraged by the Salt Lake Winter Olympic Games’ significant contributions to the Utah Athletic Foundation, which is now the largest private non-profit funder of sport in the United States. The Utah Athletic Foundation is able to maintain the Olympic Games facilities without any financial support from the government.”

VANOC commissioned the Legacies of North American Winter Games report believing the most appropriate model for understanding the potential legacies of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games is the experiences of other Winter Games held within the North American context since 1980. The independently-written reports offer a detailed look back on the experiences of previous North American Olympic Winter Games hosts.

All reports are based on research obtained from many documents including newspaper and magazine articles, official reports, studies, books, and original interviews to outline the legacies to the host communities. The Legacies reports, separately and combined, show how the host communities of Olympic Winter Games in North America continue to:

  • increase tourism in their regions
  • remind the world of their attractions at subsequent international competition
  • build sports participation
  • be national hubs for recreational and competitive sport
  • help the country’s top athletes achieve their full potential
  • attract major sports companies to locate there
  • encourage local children to excel in sport and other areas of life

“The report shows that, on a continent where enthusiasm for and participation in winter sports is widespread, hosting a successful Winter Games can have numerous, multi-faceted benefits, many of which last for generations to come,” said Furlong.

“VANOC is determined to continue this trend, delivering an outstanding Games experience in 2010 and legacies that will continue to benefit the community for many generations to come,” he concluded.

About VANOC

VANOC is responsible for the planning, organizing, financing and staging of the XXI Olympic Winter Games and the X Paralympic Winter Games in 2010. The 2010 Olympic Winter Games will be staged in Vancouver and Whistler from February 12 to 28, 2010. Vancouver and Whistler will host the Paralympic Winter Games from March 12 to 21, 2010.

About the Legacies report

VANOC commissioned the Legacies of North American Winter Games report believing the most appropriate model for understanding the potential legacies of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games is the experiences of other Winter Games held within the North American context since 1980. The independently written reports offer a detailed look back at the experiences of previous North American Olympic Winter Games hosts.

All reports are based on research obtained from many documents including newspaper and magazine articles, official reports, studies, books, and original interviews to outline the legacies to the host communities of the Games.

About the Legacies Report and Author

Kate Zimmerman has been a journalist in Canada for 27 years, writing for numerous newspapers and magazines. VANOC commissioned her in July 2006 to research and write the Legacies of North American Olympic Winter Games report. She lives in North Vancouver, BC.

Contact

VANOC Communications
mediarelations@vancouver2010.com

Vancouver 2010

British Columbians can take comfort from Calgary’s real experience, former President and CEO of Calgary 88 says – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009
Legacies of Calgary 1988 Games Impressive and Extensive

The second volume of a report commissioned by the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) indicates that the lasting legacies of the 1988 Calgary Olympic Winter Games are as impressive as they are extensive, including a direct relationship to Canada’s record medal haul at the Torino 2006 Olympic Winter Games and an unprecedented engagement of children and youth in winter sport. Touching many aspects of the community, the legacies of the ’88 Games include sport, education, culture, tourism, volunteerism, economic development and — perhaps most impressively — civic pride.

The Calgary report, which was released today at vancouver2010.com, is the second of three volumes of the Legacies of North American Olympic Winter Games report commissioned by VANOC. The first volume (Lake Placid) was released last week, and the final volume (Salt Lake) and executive summary will be released on May 14.

“I found the report to be surprisingly thorough and accurate given that the event took place nearly 20 years ago. The citizens of British Columbia can use the real experience of Calgary to take comfort that the 2010 Games are capable of providing a huge economic impact, a lasting legacy of facilities and an opportunity for individuals to share the experience of a world class event at home,” said Frank King, former President and CEO of the Calgary ’88 Olympic organizing committee. “The Olympic Winter Games involve a complex set of management issues that must be carefully balanced between the citizens at large, three levels of government, dozens of participating National Olympic Committees, all the Winter Sports Federations and the local and world media and of course, the International Olympic Committee. A successful Games has been described as ‘a miracle of shared friendship.’ Such Games can become an important social force in a world clearly seeking better ways of getting along. Much effort remains to be expended in the time remaining,” he added. “Looking forward, VANOC appears to be well on its way towards setting a new standard for successful Games,” King concluded.

“Nearly 20 years later, the 1988 Olympic Winter Games in Calgary continue to impact the development of high performance sport in Canada,” said Chris Rudge, Canadian Olympic Committee Chief Executive Officer. “The legacy of world class facilities and a multi-million-dollar endowment fund has contributed significantly to Canada’s dramatic increase in podium results at the Olympic Winter Games over the years.”

Among the many Games legacies for Calgary identified in the report are the following:

  • The 1988 Olympic Winter Games turned a profit that fuelled an endowment fund of .5 million that is now worth 5 million and continues to develop sport in a multitude of ways.
  • The host province, Alberta, benefited from 70 percent of the economic effects of the 1988 Olympic Winter Games, including 27,400 person-years of employment.
  • Calgary’s Canada Olympic Park is the second largest tourist attraction in Alberta. It draws one million people each year, 300,000 of them skiers and snowboarders.
  • Two Olympic sports, curling and short track speed skating, started out as demonstration sports in 1988. Canada has consistently won Olympic medals in these two sports since their introduction as demonstration sports at the 1988 Games.
  • Calgary hosted three Paralympic events as demonstration events. After 1988, there was a stronger commitment to creating an independent Paralympic Games to follow the Olympic Games.
  • 20 members of the Canadian Olympic team at the Olympic Winter Games in Torino were current or former members of the National Sport School in Calgary. The school was the brainchild of the Calgary Olympic Development Authority (CODA), and is operated jointly by CODA and the Calgary Board of Education; without the Calgary Olympic Winter Games and the facilities it left behind, the school would not exist. Six Olympic medalists have been students at the National Sport School since it was established in 1994.
  • The Canadian medal count has grown every Olympic Winter Games since 1988, from five in Calgary to 24 in Torino. At the Torino Games, more than 25 percent of the 196-member Canadian team was from Calgary and the surrounding area. Almost three-quarters of the medal winners in 2006 were either Albertan or had been training in the province at facilities that are a legacy of the 1988 Olympic Winter Games.
  • Calgary Olympic Winter Games volunteers still get together socially more than 18 years later. Many of them still own and wear their official volunteer jackets.
  • Some 1.5-million people a year attend events at the Pengrowth Saddledome, formerly the Olympic Saddledome and built for the 1988 Games. The building is also home to the Calgary Flames, the Western Hockey League Calgary Hitmen and the National Lacrosse League Roughnecks.
  • The Olympic Oval is still considered the fastest ice in the world and is home to Canada’s national speedskating team. It has been the site of 17 of 30 world records.
  • Canada Olympic Park (COP) offers a host of school programs, including a unique program under the auspices of Campus Calgary wherein several hundred children a year get a week of education at COP, learning their curriculum in the contexts of competitive sport and striving to be their best.
  • Close to 30,000 children, youth and adults participate in organized recreational programs at Canada Olympic Park every year.
  • The XV Olympic Arts Festival was the longest running and most comprehensive arts festival ever held in conjunction with an Olympic Winter Games, involving approximately 2,200 artists from 18 separate arts disciplines in more than 600 performances and exhibitions. More than 197,000 tickets to 258 events, were sold, worth .6 million. Calgary retains a vibrant and respected arts community and reputation to this day.

The breadth and depth of the Calgary legacies may be due in part to the successful planning and hosting of the Games themselves – Games which are universally regarded as among the most successful ever. “These have been the best-organized Olympic Winter Games in history,” then-president of the International Olympic Committee, Juan Antonio Samaranch, announced at the conclusion of the Games.

“Calgary has demonstrated that good organization, world class facilities, and — perhaps beyond all else – a supportive and enthusiastic host community, are the keys to realizing lasting legacies for host cities,” said VANOC CEO John Furlong. “We are inspired by the Calgary example and consider Calgary to be our partner in staging the Games since so many of the Canadian Olympians and Paralympians will do some of their most important training there on the legacy facilities from the ’88 Games. We are excited about the opportunities the 2010 Games present for future generations and Calgary shows us that the Games have the potential of producing so much more than two months of stellar sport performance,” he concluded.

VANOC commissioned the Legacies of North American Winter Games report believing the most appropriate model for understanding the potential legacies of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games is the experiences of other Winter Games held within the North American context since 1980. The independently-written reports offer detailed look back on the experiences of previous North American Olympic Winter Games hosts.

All reports are based on research obtained from many documents including newspaper and magazine articles, official reports, studies, books, and original interviews to outline the legacies to the host communities. The Legacies reports, separately and combined, show how the host communities of Olympic Winter Games in North America continue to:

  • increase tourism in their regions
  • remind the world of their attractions at subsequent international competition
  • build sports participation
  • be national hubs for recreational and competitive sport
  • help the country’s top athletes achieve their full potential
  • attract major sports companies to locate there
  • encourage local children to excel in sport and other areas of life

“The report shows that, on a continent where enthusiasm for and participation in winter sports is widespread, hosting a successful Winter Games can have numerous, multi-faceted benefits, many of which last for generations to come,” said Furlong.

“VANOC is determined to continue this trend, delivering an outstanding Games experience in 2010 and legacies that will continue to benefit the community for many generations to come,” he concluded.

About VANOC

VANOC is responsible for the planning, organizing, financing and staging of the XXI Olympic Winter Games and the X Paralympic Winter Games in 2010. The 2010 Olympic Winter Games will be staged in Vancouver and Whistler from February 12 to 28, 2010. Vancouver and Whistler will host the Paralympic Winter Games from March 12 to 21, 2010.

About the Legacies report

VANOC commissioned the Legacies of North American Winter Games report believing the most appropriate model for understanding the potential legacies of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games is the experiences of other Winter Games held within the North American context since 1980. The independently written reports offer a detailed look back at the experiences of previous North American Olympic Winter Games hosts.

All reports are based on research obtained from many documents including newspaper and magazine articles, official reports, studies, books, and original interviews to outline the legacies to the host communities of the Games.

About the Legacies Report and Author

Kate Zimmerman has been a journalist in Canada for 27 years, writing for numerous newspapers and magazines. VANOC commissioned her in July 2006 to research and write the Legacies of North American Olympic Winter Games report. She lives in North Vancouver, BC.

Contact

VANOC Communications
mediarelations@vancouver2010.com

Vancouver 2010

Legacies of Lake Placid Games still delivering after 27 years – Olympic News : Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics

October 26th, 2009
Volume One of Legacies of North American Winter Games report released today

The first volume of a report commissioned by the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games (VANOC) shows the legacies of the 1980 Lake Placid Olympic Winter Games are still a powerful contributor to the community 27 years after the Closing Ceremony.

The Lake Placid report, which was released today at vancouver2010.com, is the first of three volumes of the Legacies of North American Olympic Winter Games report commissioned by VANOC. The remaining two volumes of the report will be released over the next month continuing with the Calgary report on May 7, and the Salt Lake report on May 14.

The Lake Placid report is based on research obtained from many documents including newspaper and magazine articles, official reports, studies, books, and original interviews to outline the legacies to the host community of the 1980 Games. Key among the findings are a number of impressive economic and sport legacies including the following:

  • In the 2004–05 fiscal year, 25 years after the Lake Placid 1980 Olympic Winter Games, the overall economic impact of the Olympic Regional Development Authority’s (ORDA) operations to the village and surrounding counties was 3.7 million USD.
  • In 2004, an estimated 333,535 non-resident visitors used ORDA facilities. The direct impact of visitor spending on the local economy that year was more than 0 million USD, resulting in 1,056.6 jobs.
  • Almost 90 per cent of the U.S. Olympic Team members at the Torino 2006 Olympic Winter Games had gone through training in Lake Placid at some time during their sports careers.
  • Lake Placid hosts an average of five World Cups every year, in addition to numerous other competitions.
  • 33 of the 34 medals awarded to the U.S. Olympic Team at the Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Winter Games were won by athletes who trained in Lake Placid.

“As a community that has twice hosted the Olympic Winter Games, Lake Placid continues to enjoy human and economic benefits and lasting legacies,” said VANOC CEO John Furlong. “We are encouraged by the findings of this report and excited about the opportunities the Games present for future generations. Clearly, the Games have the potential of producing so much more than two months of stellar sport performance,” he concluded.

“The State of New York was honoured to host the world at the 1980 Olympic Winter Games, and we continue to welcome visitors from around the world to the Lake Placid region today,” said Sandy Caligiore, Communications Director for the State’s Olympic Regional Development Authority. “The positive economic and social impact of the Games is very real and very alive to this day,” he added.

VANOC commissioned the Legacies of North American Winter Games report believing the most appropriate model for understanding the potential legacies of the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games is the experiences of other Winter Games held within the North American context since 1980. The independently-written reports offer detailed look back on the experiences of previous North American Olympic Winter Games hosts.

The Legacies reports, separately and combined, show how the host communities of Olympic Winter Games in North America continue to:

  • increase tourism in their regions
  • remind the world of their attractions at subsequent international competition
  • build sports participation
  • be national hubs for recreational and competitive sport
  • help the country’s top athletes achieve their full potential
  • attract major sports companies to locate there
  • encourage local children to excel in sport and other areas of life

“The report shows that, on a continent where enthusiasm for and participation in winter sports is widespread, hosting a successful Winter Games can have numerous, multi-faceted benefits, many of which last for generations to come,” said Furlong.

“VANOC is determined to continue this trend, delivering an outstanding Games experience in 2010 and legacies that will continue to benefit the community for many generations to come,” he concluded.

About VANOC

VANOC is responsible for the planning, organizing, financing and staging of the XXI Olympic Winter Games and the X Paralympic Winter Games in 2010. The 2010 Olympic Winter Games will be staged in Vancouver and Whistler from February 12 to 28, 2010. Vancouver and Whistler will host the Paralympic Winter Games from March 12 to 21, 2010.

About the Lasting Legacies Report and Author

VANOC commissioned the research and writing of The Legacies of North American Olympic Winter Games report in July 2006. The researcher and author, Kate Zimmerman, has been a journalist in Canada for 27 years, writing for numerous newspapers and magazines. She lives in North Vancouver, BC.

Contact

VANOC Communications
mediarelations@vancouver2010.com

Vancouver 2010