Acrimonious debate at Calgary council over Olympics do or die decision
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The Calgary 2026 OIympic bid corporation came out swinging at city council on Wednesday, accusing councillors of wanting to take away the democratic rights of Calgarians.
The barbed words were just the latest in a sometimes acrimonious debate about the future of Calgary’s bid that has played out over the past several days.
It come as council is debating whether it should continue with the bid or kill it before a plebiscite planned for Nov. 13.
“Today when city council votes, you stand to undermine a process, a three-year process, an expensive taxpayer funded process, a democratic process that all Calgarians deserve,” said Calgary 2026 board chair Scott Hutcheson.
Who should decide on continuing the a href=”https://twitter.com/hashtag/Calgary2026?src=hashamp;ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”#Calgary2026/a bid?brbrFull story: a href=”https://t.co/IOygP15VXy”https://t.co/IOygP15VXy/a
mdash;@CBCOlympics
“You agreed to this process, you gave your word.”
Mary Moran, chief executive of Calgary 2026, also appeared frustrated.
“We also told Calgarians that it would be their decision, because that’s what you told us to tell them,” she said.
That didn’t set well with Coun. Jyoti Gondek, who accused Hutcheson of “very publicly” creating a divide, painting a picture of an incompetent council on one side and a skilled Calgary 2026 on the other.
“You’ve asked us at many turns not to be emotional, but your presentation today was underpinned by emotion,” she said.
Negotiating in public
As a backdrop to the debate, the foyer out front of council chambers was packed with supporters of the Olympid bid, who chanted “Let us vote! Let us vote!” just prior to the start of the council meeting.
Today is the culmination of a wild few days of negotiations and bad blood between federal, provincial and municipal governments.
On Tuesday, the chair of the city’s Olympic assessment committee, Coun. Evan Woolley, introduced a motion that recommends the city stop pursuing the Games and fold the bid corporation ahead of the plebiscite.
That motion is what’s before council Wednesday morning. If at least 10 of 15 council members support the motion, the Calgary 2026 bid is dead.
Last minute deal
Recommending that the plug be pulled on the Games bid, wasn’t the only Olympic-sized drama on Tuesday. Calgary 2026 released a new funding proposal late in the night signed by the province and the federal government that didn’t show any movement from their respective positions. The city has not signed on.
What did change is the bid budget was reduced through what Calgary 2026 said was savings in the budget. Rather than $3 billion needed from public funds, the organization said they now required $2.875 billion.
It wasn’t enough to convince Woolley.
“More than anybody on council, I have worked diligently and have been super excited about the opportunity,” he told CBC News on Wednesday morning. “I see very little in today’s letter that will change my vote.”
Still working out details
During the council debate, city manager Jeff Fielding said administration is not at a point where it can say whether the latest deal complies with principles council established for the negotiations.
“We’re saying we still need to do some homework to make sure we’re within the mandate that was given to us by council,” he said.
City solicitor Glenda Cole agreed, saying it would require further conversations with the bid corporation.
Fielding said the question before council is whether it feels there is enough information at this time for Calgarians to make an informed decision in the plebiscite.
City finances
Gondek made a point while questioning the emotional introduction from Calgary 2026 that council has other big decisions to make, particularly when it comes to finances.
Top of that list is a $98 million dollar hole in its tax base brought about by the economic downturn and the lingering vacancy rates in downtown Calgary.
Council is scheduled to discuss that very issue today.
The city’s finances were also a feature of Woolley’s questions. He asked administration how much money there was to fund some of the city’s capital projects outside of the Olympics.
“There are not a whole lot of funds available to us,” said city treasurer Carla Male.
Prime Minister Trudeau
Speaking from Ottawa, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said his government supports the bid.
“It would be great to host the Olympics in Canada, but obviously the ultimate decision is up to Calgarians and Albertans themselves,” he said.
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Article source: http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/morneau-budget-2018-pharmacare-1.4555186?cmp=rss
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