SALT LAKE CITY — A committee preparing a bid for Salt Lake City to host a future Winter Olympics has watched closely as the coronavirus pandemic upended carefully crafted plans and postponed the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics. But members said Tuesday that their desire to bring the Olympics back to Utah in 2030 or 2034 is unwavering.
The COVID-19 pandemic is a reminder of the risks that come with hosting the Olympics, but also offers an opportunity to learn valuable lessons from how Tokyo and Beijing organizers adapt, said Salt Lake City committee CEO Fraser Bullock.
Bullock was a key player in the team that organized Salt Lake City's 2002 Olympics that had to overcome a bribery scandal and reshape security plans after the 9/11 attacks.
"Risk is part of any Olympics Games and it's very much integrated into the planning," Bullock said. "But this is a different dimension. . . . We have to broaden our sights in terms of potential risk that could happen, which we've done."
He added: "It hasn't dampened our enthusiasm. It recommits us to be able to bring the world together."
The pandemic is also expected to delay when the International Olympic Committee will choose hosts for the 2030 and 2034 Winter Olympics, said Salt Lake City committee chair Cindy Crane.
The IOC is consumed with reshaping the Tokyo Games, now planned to start in July 2021, and preparing for the 2022 Bejing Winter Olympics, she said.
Even before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, the IOC abandoned its old practice of awarding Olympics every two years and seven years ahead of when the games are held.