Quebec's Big Owe
stadium debt is over
Montreal's Olympic Stadium needs a new nickname the
Big Owe no longer applies because Quebecers have finally paid
off their $1.5-billion debt from the 1976 Summer Games.
Officials from the Olympic Installations Board, which oversees
the stadium, have confirmed that the last payment was made in
mid-November, three decades after the world descended on Montreal
for the Games.
The astronomical cost included the stadium, the Olympic village,
a post-modern apartment building complex, a sports recreation
complex, outdoor facilities, parking and the Vélodrome,
which has since been refurbished as the Biodome.
Much of the debt was serviced through a special tax on tobacco.
Officials had estimated the debt would be cleared by September
2006, but the smoking ban introduced in May slowed down tobacco
sales in the province, according to the Canadian Press.
Quebec's chief accounting officer now needs to issue an official
statement to formally clear the debt, said Jacques Delorme, a
spokesman for the province's Finance Ministry.
"It's like if you bought a house: once you reach the deadline,
you expect that your mortgage has been paid. But still, to be
sure that your mortgage has really been paid, you have to wait
for the bank to send you a final statement to say everything's
OK. It's the same process here."
The longtime home of the Montreal Expos until the Major League
Baseball team was sold to Washington, D.C., the 58,500-seat stadium
was nicknamed the Big O, or, because of its cost, the Big Owe.
After clinching the 1976 Olympics, the mayor of Montreal at the
time, Jean Drapeau, boasted the Games would be the first auto-financed
Olympics.
"The Montreal Olympics can no more have a deficit, than a
man can have a baby," he said, a prediction that would haunt
him, as construction costs ballooned and sent the final price
tag into the stratosphere.
The Olympic Stadium opened for baseball in 1977 without a
roof, which was added about 10 years later. In 1991, a 55-tonne
chunk of the roof fell after support beams snapped. No one was
injured.
A second section of the roof collapsed in the winter of 1999 as
workers were setting up for the auto show.
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