Politics & Government
Former Gov. Dick Lamm: The Olympics: Death By Suicide
Former Gov. Richard D. Lamm weighs in on why Colorado rejected the Olympics in 1972, because of environmental impacts and financial risks.

DENVER, CO – By Richard D. Lamm for The Colorado Independent. British historian Arnold Toynbee’s observation about civilizations – “An autopsy of history would show that all great nations commit suicide” – applies also to the Olympic games.
The Olympics as an international event is dying by its own hand.
That Denver is no longer in contention to host the 2030 Winter Olympics comes as a relief. The bid was a bad idea from the start.
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The International Olympic Committee should have seen it coming. Faced with a history of staggering costs and abandoned venues, 10 possible host areas have rejected the games in the last few years. Like Easter Island, the monuments they build to themselves simply became unsustainable.
But it is not only costs. The tone-deaf International Olympic Committee members have in the past demanded five-star hotels, special traffic lanes reserved for them and a host of other amenities. Four years ago, Norway withdrew its bid for the 2022 Winter Games after IOC members insisted the King and Queen of Norway host a reception for them, which for Oslo was a final straw.
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In 1972, Colorado voters famously rejected the IOC’s first effort to bring the 1976 Winter Olympics here.
Coloradans took that unprecedented step for two reasons: they worried about the environmental impact and the financial risk — the open-ended monetary commitment that would have left taxpayers on the hook. Those issues have not changed in a half century.
READ MORE in The Colorado Independent
Image: Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Cauldron Park, Rice-Eccles Stadium, Salt Lake City, Utah (Photo by Ken Lund via Flickr:Creative Commons)