1 / 11

Sport Tourism

Sport Tourism. Paul Charbonneau Brantford – March 30, 2006. Key Figures. Over 200,000 sporting events held each year in Canada.* Sport Travel represents $2.4 billion in total tourism spending, annually.* *Canadian Tourism Commission - 2004. Economic Impacts*.

nasnan
Download Presentation

Sport Tourism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sport Tourism Paul Charbonneau Brantford – March 30, 2006

  2. Key Figures • Over 200,000 sporting events held each year in Canada.* • Sport Travel represents $2.4 billion in total tourism spending, annually.* *Canadian Tourism Commission - 2004

  3. Economic Impacts* *From the Sport Tourism Economic Assessment Model - CSTA

  4. Economic Impacts* *From the Sport Tourism Economic Assessment Model - CSTA

  5. Budget Surpluses

  6. More Impacts • Economic • It costs less to host an event than it does for your team to go to one • People • Volunteer involvement, marketable job skill development • Sport • Expose community to a new or emerging sport creates opportunity to grow the sport • Capital investment, facility refit

  7. Facilities • Multi-sport venues or Multi-field locations are more cost effective • Facilities drive Sport Tourism and Community Development • Variety of funding and financial plans out there • City owned and operated • City owned and 3rd Party operated • 3rd Party owned and operated with Community usage guarantees

  8. Facility Plans • Kingston • Current plans 1 Multiplex (4pad) & 1 LVEC • 4 pad ice complex to replace 3 current rinks • Older rinks to be converted to other sport facilities • Exploring partnership with YMCA for pool and gym services at Multiplex • Still finalizing financing model • Harmonization of user fees across city instead of tax increases

  9. Facility Plans • Sylvan Lake, AB • 15 yr development strategy • Planned construction in 3 yr spending phases • Funding through Town, Grants (Centennial), Municipal Sponsorship, Fundraising & Corporate, Inter-Municipal Partnerships • Sponsorships of Building, Dressing Rooms, for 25 and 10yrs respectively • Pre-budgeted operating needs, know shortfall going in. • Plan only accounts for 60% usage and no concession revenues

  10. Facility Plans • Coquitlam, BC • Sports Field Strategy • Artificial turf provides 4 times more playing time • Lighting at fields increases hours of operation • Differentiation between city maintained and non-city maintained facilities • Provides detailed costing for creation of fields and diamonds at different class levels • Recommended Financing to come from City Capital Budgeting • 5-7yr focus on Tournament hosting facilities

  11. Facility Plans • North Bay • A.J. Fricker School field renovation • City, School Board, Ultimate Frisbee League each contributed $15k • Ultimate League – right of first refusal for field • City – dedicated community use in Summer • School – New Field • School usage agreements • Draft Agreement with all 4 School Boards • School gets first priority • City gets Min. 8 Hrs/wk between Victoria Day and Labour Day • City keeps 15% of user fees collected during their time.

More Related