BASOC: San Francisco 2012 Olympics Bid
2012 Olympics: Bid Overview
Contact Us | Site Map | Home
Olympic Bid 2012 Newsroom FAQs Testimonials About BASOC San Francisco Bay Area Community Support the Team Calendar of Events
BASOC: San Francisco 2012 Olympics Bid
Newsroom
  Recent Press Articles
 
Archived Press Articles
  Press Releases
  E-Newsletters
Recent Press Articles

Olympic rift with gays is healed, mutual goals prompt move.

San Francisco Chronicle

October 3, 2002— After years of ill will between the U.S. Olympic movement and the Gay Games athletic competition, organizers of the gay event and boosters of bringing the Olympics to the Bay Area in 2012 said Wednesday that they had joined forces to help each other's causes.

The goodwill gesture is in part an attempt by the Bay Area Sports Organizing Committee to shore up support for its 2012 bid with a constituency still seething over the Gay Games' losing battle to be called the Gay Olympics.

The Federation of Gay Games, meanwhile, is trying to raise money for its event in Australia in November, and for future Gay Games.
"We hope by working with Bay Area leaders of the federation that we will be an example for other cities on how to be inclusive and collaborative in bringing the community together to achieve our goals," said Anne Cribbs, CEO of the Bay Area Sports Organizing Committee.

The Bay Area committee is trying to win the U.S. Olympic Committee's endorsement as U.S. candidate city for the 2012 Summer Games. In 1987, the USOC sued Gay Games founder and former Olympian Tom Waddell and the federation over their use of the word Olympics, citing property infringement.

The USOC slapped a lien on Waddell's home, even as he fought a losing battle against AIDS. Waddell died after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Olympic movement.

Gay activists upset over Waddell's treatment lobbied then-San Francisco Mayor Art Agnos against bidding for the 1996 Olympics, and the city eventually dropped out of the running.

Wednesday, standing on a balcony of the San Francisco Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Community Center, representatives from the Gay Games and the Bay Area Olympic bid effort shook hands, exchanged hugs and heralded a new era of cooperation.

"We want to make sure the dark chapter of the past is closed," Cribbs said. "We're not always proud of our past. This isn't an attempt to excuse the mistreatment of Tom Waddell. It's a step in the right direction. We have much work to do to overcome homophobia in sports."

The Gay Games federation and the Bay Area committee share a significant date: Nov. 2. That's the day of the Gay Games' opening ceremonies in Sydney, and the day the Bay Area finds out whether it or New York will be the U.S. candidate for the 2012 Games.

"I'm so proud to be here today, and I know Tom would support this," said Waddell's widow, Sarah Waddell Lewinstein. "There's nothing more that Tom wanted than inclusiveness, and that's what this is about.
"Of course it's PR," she added. "It's PR on how to bury the hatchet. It means educating people about change."

Mike Moran, spokesman for the USOC, said the support of the federation and the Bay Area's gay community could only help the local effort when it goes before the 123-member Olympic committee in Colorado Springs, Colo., next month.

"We look to that support from diverse segments of the community," he said. "The differences are way in the past."

Tom Ammiano, president of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, called the alliance an acknowledgment of gay clout.

"It's obviously a sign of progress," he said. "I say hurrah for everyone's side."

The Gay Games federation and the Bay Area Olympic committee said they had started a joint fund-raising campaign and would split the proceeds, 50-50.

"We're hoping to do some healing for the Olympic movement and recognize the contribution San Francisco has made to the movement," said Gene Dermody, individual director of the Gay Games federation. "It's a difficult bid, and we want to make sure the region's gay and lesbian community are part of the leadership."

E-mail Christopher Heredia at
cheredia@sfchronicle.com.