Victoria bid for the 2022 Commonwealth Games

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Victoria bid for the 2022 Commonwealth Games
Victoria 2022 Bid logo.jpg
Host cityCanada Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
MottoBack to the Future
Websitewww.2022victoria.com

The Victoria bid for the 2022 Commonwealth Games is a cancelled bid by Victoria, British Columbia, Canada and Commonwealth Games Canada to host the 2022 Commonwealth Games.[1] On 24 August 2017 Victoria withdrew its bid to host the 2022 Commonwealth Games, leaving only Birmingham and Liverpool in the race.

Background[]

On 30 June 2017, Victoria officially announced its bid to host the games.[2] Bid committee chair David Black announced the bid was submitted with letters of support from the provincial government, local municipalities and the University of Victoria. Lisa Helps, the mayor of Victoria, revealed on 30 April 2017 that the City of Victoria was exploring a possible bid for the 2022 Commonwealth Games. Victoria last hosted the 1994 Commonwealth Games.[3] Vancouver, which is also in British Columbia, hosted the 1954 Commonwealth Games and 2010 Winter Olympic Games and Paralympic Games.

On 24 August 2017 B.C. Finance Minister Carole James announced in a statement that the province won't contribute funding to a 2022 Commonwealth Games bid because there were too many uncertainties. She cited question marks surrounding the bid, including revenue commitments, venue locations, costs for security – which weren’t including in the bid committee’s cost estimate – and any added costs like transit, infrastructure and health services for athletes. The government agreed, with James saying they were dealing with too many other crises including one of B.C’s worst wildfire seasons in history. James suggested to bid for the 2030 Commonwealth Games.[4]

Cost[]

The total cost of the Victoria 2022 Commonwealth Games was anticipated to be in the region of $955 million with $400 million expected to come from the Government of Canada, $400 million from the province, $25 million from local municipalities and $130 million from sponsorship deals to pay for the Games.[5]

Venues[]

Following were the venues proposed for the games:[6]

Venues in Victoria[]

Venue Sport Status
Regional Stadium in the West Shore Ceremonies

Athletics

New
Gymnastics Arena Gymnastics New
Beach Volleyball Court Beach Volleyball Temporary
Saanich Commonwealth Place Swimming Existing
Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre Boxing Existing
Q Centre Judo

Wrestling

Existing
University of Victoria’s CARSA Gym Netball Existing
University of Victoria Field Hockey Existing
Bear Mountain Mountain biking Existing
Elk Lake Triathlon Existing
Juan de Fuca Lawn bowling Existing

Venues outside Victoria[]

Venue Sport Status
B.C. Place Rugby sevens Existing
Richmond Oval Badminton

Table Tennis

Existing

See also[]

Commonwealth Games celebrated in Canada

References[]

  1. ^ "Victoria announces bid for 2022 Commonwealth Games". CBC News. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
  2. ^ VAN REEUWYK, CHRISTINE. "Victoria bid to host 2022 Commonwealth Games goes in today". Victoria News. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  3. ^ Dheensaw, Cleve. "Commonwealth Games returning? Victoria may be in bid for 2022". Times Colonist. Retrieved 10 May 2017.
  4. ^ "'The dream is over': Victoria's 2022 Commonwealth Games bid tanked by province". Vancouver Island. 2017-08-24. Retrieved 2017-08-25.
  5. ^ "2022 Commonwealth Games in Victoria would cost $955M, bid group says". Vancouver Island. 2017-08-16. Retrieved 2017-08-17.
  6. ^ Ogden, Alistair (2017-08-17). "5 things to know about Victoria's 2022 Commonwealth Games bid". Victoria Buzz. Retrieved 2017-08-21.
Retrieved from ""