Chicago Would Be Even More of a Disaster if It Had Been Awarded the 2016 Olympics
The city is still paying the tab for the bid-but it could have been much worse.
Back in October 2009 there were plenty of reasons to think the Olympic torch would be lit in Chicago this summer. Instead, on Friday night, the flame will be lit in Rio de Janerio.
Chicago, and the rest of America, should breath a sigh of relief.
Chicago's bid for the 2016 seemingly had everything. It had money, as the city promised to spend $4.8 billion for the Olympics, with a good chunk of that total going to build or upgrade sporting venues.
It had timing, as it would have been the first American city to host the Summer Games since Atlanta in 1996 and the first Olympics of any kind since Salt Lake City hosted the winter version in 2002 (since World War Two ended, America had never gone more than 20 years without hosting the Olympics).
It had star power, as three of the city's most famous residents—President Barack Obama, basketball star Michael Jordan and talk show host turned business mogul Oprah Winfrey—lent their vocal support to the effort. Obama even traveled to Copenhagen, where the final vote took place, to lobby for his adopted hometown.
Up against Madrid, Rio, and Toyko in the final round of bidding, Chicago appeared to be a strong contender, if not the favorite.
Then, stunningly, Chicago was ousted in the first round of voting, getting just 18 of the 94 votes and finishing dead last in the four city field. Not even good enough for the bronze medal.
"This was the most frustrating defeat in Chicago's recent sports history," wrote Chicago Tribune columnist David Haugh, at the time.
This week, Haugh admits he was wrong about that assessment. That frustrating defeat was actually "the day the IOC saved Chicago from itself," he says.
"As bad as things seem in a city already fighting violence and the financial collapse of its government and school system, consider how much worse things would be if officials were distracted by hosting an international event as gargantuan as the Games," Haugh writes. "The Olympics likely would have added to the disrepair more than made it easier to fix."
More cities should learn from Chicago's experience. In fact, it seems like some are.
When city officials in Boston and the heads of the American Olympic Committee backed a bid for the Massachusetts capital to host the 2024 Olympics, it faced popular opposition unseen since residents of Denver voted to kill the city's winning bid to host the 1976 Winter Games. Boston's plan for the Olympics would have cost taxpayers a mere $2.7 billion, though independent analyses suggested the price tag would be north of $15 billion and maybe as much as $28 billion
Facing growing public opposition, Boston cancelled its bid last year.
Other cities haven't learned yet. Los Angeles quickly swept in to replace Boston as the U.S. bidder for the 2024 games, where it is now seen as a favorite in a four-way contest that includes Budapest, Paris and Rome.
Los Angeles does have one thing going for it. Of the 17 Summer Olympics held since the end of the Second World War, only the 1984 event in Los Angeles turned a profit, The Economist reported this week, citing research by David Goldblatt, author of The Games: A Global History of the Olympics.
One could argue that the Olympic Games aren't really meant to turn a profit, so that might be a flawed standard for measuring their success. But the Games have become staggering economic disasters for recent hosts. The 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens cost the Greek government $16 billion. As with Chicago's lost bid, hindsight makes it clear that Greece never should have hosted the Olympics, history and tradition be damned.
Athens can take some small comfort in knowing that it's hardly alone. Jim Pagels has a rundown of the ignominious fates that befell Olympic host cities—and the lavish stadiums built for the Games—in the most recent edition of Reason.
You don't even need to wait a decade to reassess the wisdom of Rio de Janerio's bid for the Games. The city planned to spend $18 billion for the Olympics, but already needed an $850 million federal bailout just to get everything ready in time. There are concerns about rising crime, unfinished facilities, unclean water and Zika. Brazil's president has been impeached after allegedly manipulating the country's budget to hide bad news (don't forget: Brazil spent an estimated $13 billion to host the World Cup just two years ago).
Still, if Rio survives the next two weeks without a major security incident and without too many athletes getting sick from the fetid water, we'll be told the Games were a success. But if Rio hadn't staged the Olympics, those $18 billion could have been used to improve the lives of the people who live there, rather than paying for the world's most expensive sporting event.
Even without winning its bid, Chicago is still paying for the 2016 Olympics. Chicago's ABC affiliate reported this week that the city has paid $91 million over the past 10 years for the site of a former hospital which was bought as part of the bidding process and was supposed to serve as the athletes' living quarters.
The city will be paying off that purchase until 2024.
"I hope we can learn from these mega-projects and, regardless of what happens to the Olympic movement, stop throwing money into all these concrete-driven mega projects that rob the poor and give money to the rich," Tom Tresser, organizer of "No Games Chicago," told ABC-7.
That's unlikely, though skepticism about hosting the Olympics is growing.
Still, in Chicago's case, it could have been much worse.
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Of course it would have been a disaster. That's the fate of almost every Olympic site.
But, what's that when weighed against the opportunity for Obama's Chicago cronies to jump on that sweet, sweet IOC corruption gravy train and make some serious bank?
The 1996 Olympics was predicated on the financial model established by the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. The cost to stage the Games was US$1.8 billion. U.S. Government funds were used for security, and around $500 million of taxpayer money was used on the physical infrastructure including streetscaping, road improvements, Centennial Olympic Park, expansion of airport, improvements in public transportation, and redevelopment of public housing projects[4] but neither paid for the actual Games and the new Venues themselves.[5] To pay for the games, Atlanta relied on commercial sponsorship and ticket sales, resulting in a profit of $10 million.
After the Atlanta games, the IOC said "never again" and refuse to allow a city to use that model. It was "too commercial".
LOL, I wonder how much money Phelps parlayed his Olympic career into last year. Oh: $10M to $12M. Not bad.
Being from Atlanta, the games actually did do well for the city. Most of the venues had a second purpose in mind, but the stupidest one was putting the tennis venue in Stone Mountain, GA. The northern suburbs are huge into tennis and the tennis venue was put in Stone Mountain solely for racial reasons.
They Confed generals on the Mtn wanted to watch?
And northern Democrats have been streaming into Atlanta ever since.
Handguns aren't allowed in Chicago. It's one of the safest places in America. What the hell is everyone on about?
/snarkcasm
People do have shot memories. Look at the Olympic venues in Athens, Greece:
http://www.businessinsider.com.....the-sand-1
I've seen a similar photo essay on several former Olympic venues.
Athens has absolutely no use for a canoe/kayak slalom center
To be fair, no one could have forseen this.
"Hey, Stavros, wanna go kayaking?"
"I am too busy protesting austerity!"
As I mentioned upthread, Atlanta did it better.
The olympic village solved GT's housing shortage problem. And they now have a swim team, lacking a natatorium before.
The Braves are abandoning the main olympic stadium, but that is due to other stupidity.
2004?! Amazing how quickly it can turn into Chernobyl-style abandonment.
That frustrating defeat was actually "the day the IOC saved Chicago from itself," he says.
No shit. Something glaringly obvious to anyone not an idiot from day one.
As a Wisconsinite, born and bred near the FIB (Fuckin' Illinois Bastards) border, those were some yummy tears when they got ousted on the FIRST VOTE. It was a sweet kick to Obama's gonads too. For many, it was the first time the Dear Leader's mask was torn. The fact that it took a trans-Statist organization to do it made it a little bitter sweet, but in a way it must have made the wound hurt even more in a way. A sleazy, laundered-gangsterland of a City got kicked in the teeth by a kindred spirit in the form of a corrupt, racketeer driven organization in the IOC.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=whsRhO0O0QE
"But we're .... CHICAGO.....!!!! Y-y-y-yyoouu mean we're just as fly-over as the rest of the Midwest?"
Bwahaahaahaaaa Haaaaaaaa....
You're just as much a target for the Blue Airplane Ice as anyone else, as the really important people fly back and forth between NYC and LA...
And if anyone here is from Chicago and I've hurt their feelings, Good.
And the Bears are going to SUCK again this year.
And the Cubs aren't going to win the world series.
And your father smells of elderberries...
Live near Chicago. Glad we didn't get the Olympics. Not offended by anything you said.
The Olympics would have been a massive shit show in Chicago this year. Just imagine all of the BLM protesters trying to raise hell on I-94/I-90 with that many tourists in town. It would have been glorious. Or all of the idiots renting hotels in Kenosha to save money and finding out how big of a shit hole it is.
I grew up outside of Kenosha and am glad that I left.
The IOC makes FIFA look clean and honest. For a summer Olympics a city used to look around and say: "got a decent track stadium - check, place to run the marathon - check, a couple of arenas nearby for indoor sports, check, a place to put athletes like a some colleges on summer break, check", etc... Then they bid for the Olympics.
Now the shitheads expect it all to be built from scratch and to be spectacular - while getting paid off.
I hope this Olympics is a spectacular disaster.
Wait... the IOC doesn't want us to use empty dorm rooms to house the athletes?
There's no graft in empty dorms or already-constructed stadia.
I really can't hope for a disaster. But I won't be the least bit surprised if that's what happens.
Disaster, sure. But at least some of the competitors would have been shot.
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