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Opponents weigh referendum on Boston’s 2024 Olympics bid

In this Jan. 14 file photo, Chris Dempsey, co-chair of the organization No Boston Olympics, addresses a crowd during a public meeting in Boston, held to discuss plans to keep the 2024 Summer Olympic Games from coming to the city. Boston was selected by the USOC to be the American nominee for the 2024 Summer Games. Dempsey said Friday that the opposition group is considering pursuing a ballot question either for the 2016 statewide election or this year’s citywide election in Boston. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)

In this Jan. 14 file photo, Chris Dempsey, co-chair of the organization No Boston Olympics, addresses a crowd during a public meeting in Boston, held to discuss plans to keep the 2024 Summer Olympic Games from coming to the city. Boston was selected by the USOC to be the American nominee for the 2024 Summer Games. Dempsey said Friday that the opposition group is considering pursuing a ballot question either for the 2016 statewide election or this year’s citywide election in Boston. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)

PHILIP MARCELO, Associated Press
BOSTON (AP) — Opponents of bringing the 2024 Summer Olympics to Boston are looking into a voter referendum, an effort that could jeopardize hopes of bringing the Summer Games to U.S. soil for the first time since 1996.
Christopher Dempsey, co-chairman of No Boston Olympics, said Friday that the opposition group is considering pursuing a ballot question for either the 2016 statewide election or this year’s citywide election.
He says the group also is considering legislative options that could block the games outright, or at least improve the current proposal, which critics fear will come at a significant cost to taxpayers, despite what Olympics supporters promise.
Dempsey’s comments come after Evan Falchuk, who ran unsuccessfully for governor last year, filed paperwork Thursday forming an organization called People’s Vote Olympics Committee to support a binding statewide referendum.
“We are still evaluating the best strategy. If we decided to do statewide, we’d envision working with (Falchuk’s) effort in some fashion, but it’s too early to say,” Dempsey said. “If we pursued a citywide initiative, we don’t think that is at all inconsistent with what Evan is doing.”

In this Oct. 7, 2014, file photo, Massachusetts gubernatorial candidate, independent Evan Falchuk speaks to reporters after the first televised debate amongst all five candidates in Boston. Falchuk, who opposes bringing the 2024 Summer Olympics to Boston, filed papers Thursday, forming a new political organization -- the "People's Vote Olympics Committee" -- to support a binding statewide referendum that could block the Games from happening in Boston. The USOC chose Boston to be the American nominee for the 2024 Summer Games. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola, File)

In this Oct. 7, 2014, file photo, Massachusetts gubernatorial candidate, independent Evan Falchuk speaks to reporters after the first televised debate amongst all five candidates in Boston. Falchuk, who opposes bringing the 2024 Summer Olympics to Boston, filed papers Thursday, forming a new political organization — the “People’s Vote Olympics Committee” — to support a binding statewide referendum that could block the Games from happening in Boston. The USOC chose Boston to be the American nominee for the 2024 Summer Games. (AP Photo/Elise Amendola, File)

To get on the 2016 ballot, opponents must file a petition with the state attorney general’s office by August and gather roughly 65,000 signatures from registered voters by early December, according to the secretary of state’s office.
To get on this year’s Boston ballot, opponents would need to either secure approval from both the mayor and city council at least 35 days before the election or gather nearly 40,000 signatures from registered city voters, according to Mayor Marty Walsh’s office.
Daniel O’Connell, who stepped down Friday as president of Boston 2024, the group spearheading the city’s Olympics efforts, says it’s too early to say what the organization would do if voters rejected an Olympics bid.
“The language of referendum is critical,” he said earlier this week. “We just have to see what’s put on the ballot … how the question is formed, whether it’s a Boston referendum or a statewide referendum. (There are) so many uncertainties to how that might come out. … We’d wait to see how that unfolds before we make a decision.”

As Boston Mayor Martin Walsh looks on, right, Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker speaks during a news conference in Boston Friday, Jan. 9, after Boston was picked by the USOC as its bid city for the 2024 Olympic Summer Games. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

As Boston Mayor Martin Walsh looks on, right, Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker speaks during a news conference in Boston Friday, Jan. 9, after Boston was picked by the USOC as its bid city for the 2024 Olympic Summer Games. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)

A spokesman for the U.S. Olympic Committee, which picked Boston over Los Angeles, San Francisco and Washington, D.C., says the committee has no plans of changing its chosen host city. The USOC must submit its final bid to the International Olympic Committee in September. The IOC is expected to announce its pick in 2017.
“Boston has an exciting vision for the Games,” USOC spokesman Patrick Sandusky. “As the public learns more about what the games could mean for the community, we’re confident the bid will have overwhelming support.”
Local referendums are nothing new in Olympics decision-making.
Robert Livingstone, founder of GamesBids.com, a website on the Olympic host city selection process, notes that Berlin has called for a September referendum on its 2024 bid if it becomes Germany’s pick for host city. The rival city of Hamburg is also weighing one.
Last year, Krakow withdrew its 2022 Winter Games bid after voters in that Polish city rejected the proposal, joining a number of cities backing out of that competition.
Denver holds the distinction of being the only city in the modern Olympic history to relinquish the games after winning them. Voters in Colorado’s capital opposed using state tax revenues for the games as preparations were under way for the 1976 Winter Games, which ultimately went to Innsbruck, Austria.

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