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Friday February 10, 2012

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Local News

Expanded WAVE service likely during Games

Locals’, Whistler-centered packages part of 2010 ticketing scheme Olympics

Whistler and Valley Express (WAVE) may have an expanded bus service in Whistler and the Sea to Sky corridor during the 2010 Olympics, says Caley Denton, VANOC vice president of ticketing and consumer marketing.

“From my understanding there is going to be an enhanced WAVE service that will go from Squamish into Whistler,” Denton said during a conference call with local media last Friday (Oct. 3).

Currently the Vancouver 2010 website says the Olympic bus network is linked to park-and-ride locations throughout Metro Vancouver and will move spectators to venues in Whistler, but there is no planned stop as yet in Squamish.

There will be no spectator parking in Whistler or Vancouver because VANOC officials want to reduce the amount of congestion on the Sea to Sky Highway, said the website.

On Friday, VANOC kicked off the first phase of its ticketing process for Canadians. Between now and Nov. 7, Canadians are being invited to submit ticket requests at www.vancouver2010.com.

Denton, who said the number of hits on VANOC’s website increased about tenfold the instant officials began accepting ticket requests, said that system will shut down on Nov. 7. If any events have maxed their seat limit then a random lottery will be used to award the seats, and those who have made requests will be notified by Dec. 5. Remaining tickets will go on sale on a first-come, first-served basis from Dec. 8 to 22.

Other countries’ national Olympic committees will be given an allotment of tickets, and those tickets will be made available through their respective national Olympic committees or a designated agent, Denton said.

Corridor residents may be most interested in one of three Whistler Locals Olympic Experience Packages (OEPs), which is designed to include four to six events spread out over weekends and evenings so that locals can see competitions and ceremonies around their work schedules. The three packages include tickets to five or six events each and cost $305, $371 and $775, respectively.

Those packages, while geared toward locals, are available to anyone wishing to purchase them, Denton said.

“When we looked at the model from Salt Lake (in 2002), there wasn’t really anything directed at locals,” he said. “We thought that from that perspective, we wanted to put something together that would give them the full experience, with mostly events on the weekends so that they could continue to work, and still enjoy the experience of the Games.”

Of the 51 OEPs available, eight are designed specifically for those wishing to focus their attention on the Whistler events. The Whistler OEPs, ranging from $156 to $1,274 (the latter includes a premium ticket to the Opening Ceremonies in Vancouver, priced individually at $1,118), include events spread over a three- or four-day period. For $156, for example, ticket holders will be able to attend cross-country skiing on Feb. 19, 2010, bobsleigh on Feb. 20 and alpine skiing (giant slalom qualification) on Feb. 21.

VANOC has yet to include the Whistler celebration/medal ceremonies in the packages because, according to Denton, officials don’t yet have a good grasp of how many people the venue can hold and how it will be set up for the ceremonies. Officials also have yet to decide whether tickets for the ceremonies in Whistler will be free, as are some, but not all, ceremonies in Vancouver. Denton said officials should be able to answer that question by mid-2009.

Denton said he was pleased to see from the website that people across the country are interested in coming to Vancouver during the Olympics.

“The nice thing we have seen in all of our surveys is that Canadians are really embracing the idea of the Olympic experience. Whether it is going to the ski jump with a bus load of Finnish people or watching the biathlon with some Germans, or hanging out with the Austrians at the alpine event or coming to the city, everyone just wants to go and enjoy it and get the feeling of the magic of the game as it happens,” Denton said.

— With files from David Burke, The Question


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