Olympic Reform Conference Picketed by Toronto Students

U of T Part Time Students Union pickets Olympic Reform Conference

By John Bonnar | May 21, 2009. rabble.ca

Photos: http://johnb.smugmug.com/gallery/8264278_bmiNR#540785512_8GVLv

The Olympic Reform conference is nothing but a whitewash designed more to
gloss over the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) failings than to
provide insight into how the organization actually operates, according to
The Association of Part-time Undergraduate Students (APUS) at the
University of Toronto.

Joeita Gupta, Vice President External of APUS called the forum “a slick
piece of pro-IOC propaganda dressed up as an academic exercise. Five of
the forum’s nine keynote speakers have direct ties to the IOC and most are
white males.”

On December 11-12, 1999, the International Olympic Committee, meeting in
‘Extraordinary Session’, voted to approve 49 reforms recommended by the
IOC 2000 Commission. The Commission was appointed to address an Olympic
legitimation crisis that had been growing throughout the 1990s and which
exploded with the Salt Lake City bribery revelations and the IOC’s seeming
indifference to the Tour de France doping scandal.

The wide-ranging reforms promised major changes in the composition,
structure and operations of the IOC, the manner in which Olympic host
cities were chosen, and the organization of the Olympic and Paralympic
Games.

“This conference has been organized to evaluate the implementation of those Olympic reforms and related developments within the OlympicMovement within the last decade,” said the organizers of Olympic Reform – A Ten Year Review, a two day research conference held May 19 and May 20 at the University of Toronto.

“It is intended to advance scholarship into the Olympic Movement, and to
bring Olympic scholars, members of the Olympic Movement, and interested
members of the public together, in a spirit of engaged critical inquiry,
academic freedom, and respectful debate, to discuss how the 1999 spirit of
Olympic reform can be maintained, strengthened, and implemented while
addressing the challenges the Olympic Movement faces today.”

On Tuesday morning, a small group set up a picket outside the U of T’s
Athletic Centre where the Olympic Reform Conference was held. Holding a
banner reading “Don’t Play Games with Our Priorities. No Olympics on
Campus. No Pan-Am Games Either!” protestors handed out leaflets to
passersby for a few hours.

“This is not so much about Olympic reform,” said Oriel Varga, Executive
Director APUS. “It’s more about bringing their IOC buddies into town for
the Pan Am games.”

In preparation for the Pan American games, the University of Toronto hopes
to build a $170 million Olympic-sized Aquatics facility at the Scarborough
campus and a $50 million Centre for High Performance Sport at the St.
George campus, displacing the APUS office location.

“Mega-sporting events around the world come at great expense to the
community, limiting human rights and gentrifying neighbourhoods in which
marginalized peoples reside,” said Gupta. “Our members are largely
parents, workers, mature, racialized students and students with
disabilities, who have more pressing needs.”

Even though APUS has had some discussions with the university around
relocating, Varga said the Association doesn’t want to leave. A year ago,
APUS had to relocate and doesn’t want to have to do it all over again.

“We need to prioritize the students,” said Varga. “The university is
willing to spend millions for the Pan American Games Bid, while at the
same time are proposing a 66% hike for our members.” Starting in September
2011, part-time students will be charged for five courses, even if they
only take three.

Varga added, “The university is also expecting our members to finance the
operating costs of the two proposed athletic facilities. They’re already
talking about a $50 to $60 levy for membership, which our members can’t
afford.”

During a recession, said Varga, governments need to ensure our city pools
remain open rather than spending millions on one Olympic-sized pool.

David Peterson, the Chancellor of the University of Toronto, is also heading the Pan American bid that, if successful, would see Games events staged in Toronto and across the Greater Golden Horseshoe region over 25 days in July and August, 2015.

“The venue plan is a critical component of our bid to host the 2015 Pan
and Parapan Am Games,” said Peterson in a February article on the Toronto
2015 Pan Am Games Committee website. “We have come up with an exciting and achievable plan that is good for Toronto, good for the Greater Golden
Horseshoe region and good for an excellent Games.”

In the same article, Toronto 2015 said the Games would bring a total $1.4
billion injection of federal, provincial, municipal and private funding
into sports infrastructure for broad community benefits and long-term
athlete development in Ontario for years to come, adding it would also
trigger more than 15,000 jobs in construction, tourism and event support.

According to Toronto 2015, the Canadian Sports Institute Ontario (CSIO)
and the Pan Am Games Aquatics Centre are major legacy developments, with
the City of Toronto and the University of Toronto in partnership. The CSIO
will provide sport science, support and performance resources for
long-term community benefits and athlete development. The Aquatics Centre
will be a national high-performance centre, accessible to Ontario athletes
currently underserved in elite training.

Varga made it clear that APUS has nothing against sport or the athletes,
but believes other projects should be given primary consideration.