Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Years After Olympic Bid, Toronto's Sports Infrastructure Still Lacking: Critics

The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2015 11:20 AM
    Toronto has invested in world-class sports facilities since its last bid to host the Olympics, but some experts say the city must do more to foster sports and recreation in the community if it hopes to make — and win — a third pitch for the Games.
     
    Concerns over residents' access to sports and recreation were raised during Toronto's bid for the 2008 Summer Olympics, and some in the sports community say the city still struggles to keep up with demand for public sports infrastructure despite the construction of new elite venues for the Pan Am and Parapan Am Games.
     
    The city still lacks a "realistic, sustainable" plan to bolster sports and physical activity and make them more accessible to lower-income residents, said Bruce Kidd, a University of Toronto expert on Canadian sport and the Olympics.
     
    "While we started that, we haven't done it significantly," he said in a recent interview. "We've got to do a much better job."
     
    New rules set by the International Olympic Committee emphasize social as well as economic sustainability. "If they walk the talk, they'll be asking about that and they'll want evidence of a much greater investment in sports and physical activity in Toronto than we have now," Kidd said.
     
    Talk of another Olympic bid began before the Pan Am Games ended on July 26. The Canadian Olympic Committee is firmly in favour, but Toronto Mayor John Tory says he wants to wait until after the Parapan Am Games — which end Saturday — to make a decision.
     
    Cities interested in hosting the 2024 Summer Games have until Sept. 15 to formally express their interest.
     
    An Olympic bid could be the catalyst the city needs to invest in crucial neighbourhood facilities, said Heather Mitchell, chair of the Toronto Sports Council, an organization created to promote sports after the 2008 failed bid.
     
    "The City of Toronto does its best to keep up with the demand but there just aren't enough fields of play," largely due to budget restrictions, she said.
     
     
    Cricket enthusiasts are forced to play in nearby Brampton, while soccer fields and baseball diamonds are chronically overbooked, she said. Many pools are located in schools and only available during limited hours, she added.
     
    A municipal report commissioned after Toronto's last bid found the city was lagging behind in both the number and quality of sports facilities.
     
    "Increased population density adds further strain to already limited sport and recreation infrastructure. There is an urgency to address sport infrastructure," a follow-up report found.
     
    In 2012, the city projected it would have an accumulated maintenance and repair backlog of nearly $300 million for its parks and recreation facilities by the end of the year, documents show.
     
    Aside from the new Pan Am venues, not much has changed since then, Mitchell said. 
     
    The organization is pushing for the city to develop a formal sports strategy that would lay out priorities for the next five to 10 years — a move Mitchell said would dovetail with a possible bid.
     
    "If you're sitting on city council and you've got this bid coming forward and you don't have a good sense of what you've already got and what the demands of your own community are, this plan would do that for you," she said. 
     
    City staff are working on a framework for such a strategy and will report back to council's community development and recreation committee.
     
    The head of the committee said the city is making strides in supporting local sports, pointing to the new soccer, aquatics and track-and-field facilities built for the Pan Am Games as well as a new four-pad arena in west Toronto.
     
     
    "I think there's been a dramatic shift for Toronto, with a great emphasis not only at the professional level of investing in sport but also the amateur level and the recreational level," Coun. James Pasternak said.
     
    Still, he said, "when it comes to sports and recreation, you can always do more."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Russell Brown Brings 'wide Experience' To Supreme Court, Says Chief Justice

    Russell Brown Brings 'wide Experience' To Supreme Court, Says Chief Justice
    OTTAWA — Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin is welcoming Russell Brown to the Supreme Court of Canada.

    Russell Brown Brings 'wide Experience' To Supreme Court, Says Chief Justice

    Manitoba Natural Gas Pipeline That Exploded Had Pre-existing Defect, Report Says

    WINNIPEG — The Transportation Safety Board says a natural gas pipeline that exploded in Manitoba last year had a crack that formed at the time of its construction more than 50 years ago.

    Manitoba Natural Gas Pipeline That Exploded Had Pre-existing Defect, Report Says

    Liberals Who Helped Defeat Eve Adams Say Her Loss Will Help Justin Trudeau

    Liberals Who Helped Defeat Eve Adams Say Her Loss Will Help Justin Trudeau
    OTTAWA — Liberals who helped defeat Eve Adams in her bid to run as the party's candidate in a Toronto riding said Monday they've done Justin Trudeau "a big favour."

    Liberals Who Helped Defeat Eve Adams Say Her Loss Will Help Justin Trudeau

    Colleagues Appear To Bail Out Finance Minister From Testifying On Canada's Books

    Colleagues Appear To Bail Out Finance Minister From Testifying On Canada's Books
    OTTAWA — A Conservative-dominated parliamentary committee voted against a process Monday that would have likely called on Finance Minister Joe Oliver to testify in public about the state of Canada's finances amid a troubled economy.

    Colleagues Appear To Bail Out Finance Minister From Testifying On Canada's Books

    Ottawa Awards Military Contracts To Montreal-Area Company Rheinmetall Canada Inc

    Ottawa Awards Military Contracts To Montreal-Area Company Rheinmetall Canada Inc
    Rheinmetall Canada Inc. will get an initial $8.5 million to test the system. The government may then exercise options to buy up to 4,144 of the units with the total value as much as $250 million.

    Ottawa Awards Military Contracts To Montreal-Area Company Rheinmetall Canada Inc

    After Up-and-down Start To The Season, B.C. Lions Looking For Consistency

    After Up-and-down Start To The Season, B.C. Lions Looking For Consistency
    Great sequences have been quickly followed by long stretches where the club has looked completely out of sync, with big comebacks as likely to happen as blown leads.

    After Up-and-down Start To The Season, B.C. Lions Looking For Consistency