Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec City Mayor Up For Sharing 2026 Olympic Events With Calgary And Vancouver

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2016 12:18 PM
    Quebec City's mayor says he has had discussions with his counterparts in Calgary, Vancouver and Lake Placid about sharing events at the 2026 Winter Olympics.
     
    Regis Labeaume will be in the Swiss city of Lausanne on April 11 to meet with International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach to have preliminary talks aimed at a possible bid for the Games that year.
     
    Labeaume noted in a statement Thursday that Bach sent out the invitation in early January.
     
    The mayor has often said the costs of organizing an Olympics are far too pricey.
     
    "People in Quebec City know my views on Olympic Games and, until further notice, they haven't changed," he said at a news conference later Thursday.
     
    Quebec City wants to possibly team up Calgary, Vancouver and Lake Placid to lower the cost of infrastructure investments.
     
    "We understand that the Olympic agenda would enable the host city the chance to partner with another city in order to share some events," Labeaume said.
     
    "Three cities that have infrastructure that Quebec doesn't — such as bobsled tracks and springboards for ski jumping — could eventually be associated with Quebec's bid."
     
    Labeaume added that such an alliance would "dramatically diminish the total costs of infrastructure investments, which would make the Games more affordable."
     
    The Winter Olympics were held in Lake Placid in 1932 and 1980, Calgary in 1988 and Vancouver in 2010. The 2018 edition will be in Pyeongchang, South Korea, and the 2022 Olympics will take place in Beijing.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mountie Involved In Dziekanski Case Launches Lawsuit, Claims RCMP Negligence

    A Mountie who responded the night Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski died at Vancouver's airport has filed a lawsuit alleging RCMP negligence and harassment in the handling of his case.

    Mountie Involved In Dziekanski Case Launches Lawsuit, Claims RCMP Negligence

    Children's Advocate Calls For Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry To Probe Suicides

    Children's Advocate Calls For Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry To Probe Suicides
    Of 33 suicides MacDonald has investigated in the last three years, 17 were indigenous girls.

    Children's Advocate Calls For Missing, Murdered Women Inquiry To Probe Suicides

    Manitoba Health Says H1N1 Influenza Cases On The Rise In The Province

    Manitoba Health Says H1N1 Influenza Cases On The Rise In The Province
    That's the strain that claimed several hundred lives during the 2009 pandemic.

    Manitoba Health Says H1N1 Influenza Cases On The Rise In The Province

    Doctor Affiliated With Catholic Hospital Speaks Out Against Assisted-Death Ban

    Doctor Affiliated With Catholic Hospital Speaks Out Against Assisted-Death Ban
    A doctor affiliated with a Catholic hospital in a small British Columbia community says the facility's likely ban on assisted-dying is a violation of terminally ill patients' charter rights.

    Doctor Affiliated With Catholic Hospital Speaks Out Against Assisted-Death Ban

    Alberta Man Charged With Severely Beating, Raping 6-Year-Old Girl Could Get 10 Years In Prison

    Alberta Man Charged With Severely Beating, Raping 6-Year-Old Girl Could Get 10 Years In Prison
      James Clifford Paul, who is 22, was charged after a six-year-old girl was found lying naked in the snow on the Paul reserve west of Edmonton on Dec. 20, 2014.

    Alberta Man Charged With Severely Beating, Raping 6-Year-Old Girl Could Get 10 Years In Prison

    No Buts About It: Prof Argues Tobacco Companies Must Deal With Discarded Butts

    No Buts About It: Prof Argues Tobacco Companies Must Deal With Discarded Butts
    Prof. Kelley Lee of Simon Fraser University argues that a new regulatory approach is long overdue for what she considers an industry-created problem.

    No Buts About It: Prof Argues Tobacco Companies Must Deal With Discarded Butts