Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Public, Political Opposition Seen As 'Greatest Risks' To Olympic Bid: Documents

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Nov, 2015 12:33 PM
    Toronto officials saw public resistance as the main threat to a possible Olympic bid and worried holding a referendum on the issue would "allow critics to overstate and inflate opposition" to hosting the 2024 Games, documents reveal.
     
    Emails and briefing materials written by Toronto Mayor John Tory's staff — obtained by The Canadian Press through access-to-information laws — suggest a lack of public and government support were seen as the "greatest risks" to a Toronto pitch.
     
    "Support could wane following the Pan Am Games or given an unfavourable media climate," according to a document from late July. "A number of advocacy groups, activists and politicians will organize against the Olympic bid."
     
    And with the federal election still looming at the time, there was concern that "a federal political party may campaign on the promise of scuttling an Olympic bid," it said.
     
    The document notes that the International Olympic Committee expects public support for a bid to be between 80 and 85 per cent, but a Forum poll conducted in January found that only 61 per cent of Toronto residents were in favour.
     
    Talk of Toronto potentially making a bid emerged as excitement built around the summer's Pan Am Games hosted by Toronto and surrounding communities.
     
    But Tory announced on Sept. 15 — the deadline to register interest with the IOC — that the city would not proceed this time, saying there wasn't enough time to crunch numbers and assess the impact of the Games.
     
    He also said at the time that federal party leaders and members of the business community were cautious when it came to pledging funds.
     
    A briefing note prepared by the mayor's office said the most significant "legacy risks" of hosting the Games would be large cost overruns, underuse of existing infrastructure and failure to meet construction timelines.
     
    It suggested, however, that new IOC guidelines encouraging the use of existing facilities could push the costs below a previous estimate of $3.3 to $7 billion, while warning that the higher figure, though "no longer relevant," would be used by critics of the bid.
     
     
    The document also proposed to reduce the apparent costs of the Olympics by arranging land remediation to the city's waterfront — which would be used for the athletes village — outside of the Games preparation process.
     
    "If the other levels of government were to make funding commitments to the Port Lands revitalization independent of the Olympic bid, the line item for Port Lands could be excised from the cost of the Olympics, further reducing the sticker price," it said.
     
    The remediation was estimated to cost $975 million.
     
    Other documents also suggest the Canadian Olympic Committee was concerned that Tory appeared hesitant.
     
    Hours before then-COC president Marcel Aubut announced his intention to push for a bid in a televised interview, committee spokesman Carl Vallee emailed Tory's office asking that talk of a pitch not be described as "speculative" in the mayor's media statements.
     
    "When I read it, it makes me think the mayor is backing off and downplaying it," Vallee wrote.
     
    "It's no longer speculative the moment Marcel says what he said. It's becoming very real," he said in a follow-up email.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Conservative Leader To Be Chosen; Could Signal Change In Party Tone

    New Conservative Leader To Be Chosen; Could Signal Change In Party Tone
    Conservatives will pick an interim replacement today for former leader Stephen Harper — a decision that could, at least temporarily, mark a shift to how the party operates.

    New Conservative Leader To Be Chosen; Could Signal Change In Party Tone

    Canada Side Deal With U.S. On Illicit Trade Emerges With Release Of TPP Text

    Canada Side Deal With U.S. On Illicit Trade Emerges With Release Of TPP Text
    Canada has signed almost two dozen side letters with its trading partners in the Trans-Pacific Partnership, including an agreement with the United States to combat illicit trade.

    Canada Side Deal With U.S. On Illicit Trade Emerges With Release Of TPP Text

    Boozy, Men-Only Fundraiser For Addiction Centre Sparks Some Criticism

    Boozy, Men-Only Fundraiser For Addiction Centre Sparks Some Criticism
    The $1,000-per-ticket fundraiser, billed as a "Gentlemen's Gala Event," was to raise money for Vitanova Foundation, a non-profit mental health treatment facility for alcohol, drug and gambling addicts.

    Boozy, Men-Only Fundraiser For Addiction Centre Sparks Some Criticism

    Hydro One Makes Debut On The Toronto Stock Exchange In Biggest IPO In 15 Years

    Hydro One Makes Debut On The Toronto Stock Exchange In Biggest IPO In 15 Years
    The Ontario government has said it plans to use the $1.66 billion generated by selling 13.6 per cent of its stake in the company to fund transit and infrastructure projects.

    Hydro One Makes Debut On The Toronto Stock Exchange In Biggest IPO In 15 Years

    A Great Day For Canada, Says Indian Origin Ex-Revenue Minister Herb Dhaliwal

    A Great Day For Canada, Says Indian Origin Ex-Revenue Minister Herb Dhaliwal
    The swearing-in of four Indian-Canadians as cabinet ministers is "a great day for Canada and a great day for India", said Herb Dhaliwal, the western world's first Indian-origin cabinet minister when he was appointed Canada's revenue minister in 1997

    A Great Day For Canada, Says Indian Origin Ex-Revenue Minister Herb Dhaliwal

    A Look At Some Issues Facing Each Member Of Justin Trudeau's First Cabinet

    A Look At Some Issues Facing Each Member Of Justin Trudeau's First Cabinet
    The new federal cabinet has a lot of issues to tackle, and not a lot of time to learn their files. Here is an idea of what each new minister faces

    A Look At Some Issues Facing Each Member Of Justin Trudeau's First Cabinet