January 18, 2002
Clock ticks down in Nuuk
With only two months
to go, the Nuuk host society prepares for the games
MIRIAM
HILL
Preparations for the 2002
Arctic Winter games in Nuuk, Greenland, are coming down to the wire.
According to Michael Binzer,
general manager for the Nuuk team, contractors are putting the finishing electrical
touches on the main sports arena that will house many of the events in Greenland.
Binzer was in Iqaluit this
week to meet with the Iqaluit team for some last-minute strategizing and planning.
"When I started out we didnt have the [sports] facilities we needed,
which was pretty late to realize that," he said. "We let the politicians
realize this was an obligation. Then we had a multi-sport facility built for
$10 million. It is finished and heated, but we need to have electrical installations
finalized. Its right down to the end."
There are only two months
left before 2,000 Arctic athletes begin travelling to Iqaluit and Nuuk for the
week-long games, being held jointly between the two cities. As in Iqaluit, banners
have gone up in the 15,000-strong city advertising the games, which begin March
17.
Flight challenges
Although not exactly last
minute, the cancellation of regularly scheduled flights between Greenland and
Iqaluit caused a minor logistical nightmare, Binzer admitted.
Nuuk doesnt have
an international airstrip, which means jets must fly to one of the more northern
communities and passengers must transfer to smaller shuttle planes with a capacity
of 42 people. "Were talking about 1,000 people being shipped in on
small charters," he said.
"I had to make an
agreement with Greenland Air to have all maintenance put aside for the whole
period of March. Then we had to change the whole flight schedule in Greenland
for a week," Binzer said. The former sales manager for Greenland Air also
pulled a few strings. "It helps to have some contacts in the airline company."
Volunteering a new concept
There are 53 committees
working on the Nuuk organizing team, each with between five and 10 members.
The committees deal with issues including sports, culture, logistics, marketing,
venues and volunteers.
"We dont have
the concept of volunteerism in Greenland so thats a big challenge,"
Binzer said. About 800 volunteers are needed, and 675 have registered to date.
"The primary thing weve done is give the event recognition
to make it of a certain status to be involved in the games."
Committee chairs were hand-picked
by the organizing team. The team went to CEOs of local companies, politicians,
and other trusted locals. Of 53 chairs only four are not local.
Nuuks challenges
While Iqaluit and Nuuk
do face many of the same logistical challenges, such as feeding huge numbers
of athletes and ferrying them to different venues, Nuuk has one additional challenge.
Its staff has never staged an event of this sort before. Many key Iqaluit team
members have helped in organizing previous games in previous years.
"Here you have some
people involved in the games, like Kim Wasylyshen [general manager of the Iqaluit
team], who have done this before," Binzer said. "And you have a Canadian
tradition. This is Canada and you have a way of doing business that is totally
different from us."
Even something as simple
as language is a challenge. In Greenland English is the third language after
Greenlandic and Danish.
Accomodations
Athletes competing in Nunavut
will be housed under one roof at the old Arctic College residence at the end
of Federal Road, but in Nuuk they will be spread between facilities.
"Three of the big
schools are being closed and we will move out all the chairs, all the tables,
and move in new beds," Binzer explained. Students in Nuuk are going to
school on Saturdays now so they wont miss out on their studies when their
schools are closed during the week of the games.
Visitors will have a difficult
time finding somewhere to stay in Iqaluit during the games, but Binzer said
the same isnt true in Nuuk.
"We have almost 500
hotel rooms and, apart from that, we have other accommodation facilities, like
bed and breakfasts, small apartments with kitchenettes," he said. "We
told TV crews they would not have hotel rooms." Theyll stay in hostels
and small apartments.
Showing off the culture
Both Greenland and Iqaluit
are too small to host the games on their own, Binzer said, But a joint event
is a great opportunity to show the cities shared culture.
Nuuk may look vastly different
from Iqaluit, with its high mountains, Scandinavian architecture and never-frozen
sea, but Binzer said he feels the same excitement level and interest as the
clock ticks closer to the games joint opening ceremonies.
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