Here's what city leaders nationwide can learn from Utah's Olympic experience

Dwayne Tuggle, mayor of Amherst, Va., left, and Kelly Burk, mayor of Leesburg, Va., right, speak with Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall at the Utah Olympic Park in Park City on Wednesday.

Dwayne Tuggle, mayor of Amherst, Va., left, and Kelly Burk, mayor of Leesburg, Va., right, speak with Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall at the Utah Olympic Park in Park City on Wednesday. (Laura Seitz, Deseret News)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall urged cities to host Olympic watch parties on Wednesday.
  • Mendenhall highlighted Utah's lasting Olympic legacy and potential as a perpetual host.
  • Leaders discussed community involvement and infrastructure for future Olympic events nationwide.

PARK CITY — Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall offered a simple suggestion to local government leaders from around the country gathered at the Utah Olympic Park Wednesday for a panel discussion on taking advantage of big events.

Organize a watch party for the community during the 2026 Winter Games in Milan-Cortina, Italy. Last month, Salt Lake City announced plans for family-friendly watch parties downtown throughout the next Olympics and Paralympics that follow for athletes with disabilities.

"You could at least look at doing an opening ceremonies watch party," Mendenhall urged the nearly 100 attendees of this week's National League of Cities summit in Salt Lake City who traveled by bus to the Park City site of Utah's Olympic sliding track and ski jumps.

Tom Kelly, communications lead for the Organizing Committee for the 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, left, Emily Fisher, executive director of Youth Sports Alliance, Catherine Raney Norman, vice president of development and athlete relations for Salt Lake City-Utah 2034, Calum Clark, chief operating officer for the Utah Olympic Legacy Foundation, and Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall speak to National League of Cities attendees at the Utah Olympic Park in Park City on Wednesday. The panel discussed how leaders can learn from Utah's Olympic experience.
Tom Kelly, communications lead for the Organizing Committee for the 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, left, Emily Fisher, executive director of Youth Sports Alliance, Catherine Raney Norman, vice president of development and athlete relations for Salt Lake City-Utah 2034, Calum Clark, chief operating officer for the Utah Olympic Legacy Foundation, and Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall speak to National League of Cities attendees at the Utah Olympic Park in Park City on Wednesday. The panel discussed how leaders can learn from Utah's Olympic experience. (Photo: Laura Seitz, Deseret News)

"I think every American has a fire inside for Team USA. When you watch the opening ceremonies, you watch any event with your community members, you start to feel it," the mayor said, calling it "a very low-cost way" to embrace what's being called America's decade of sport.

The decade of major sporting events, that concludes with Utah's next Olympics, also includes the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles as well as next year's World Cup soccer matches in cities around the country, as well as in Canada and Mexico.

Such events can bring communities together, she said, citing the thousands of Utahns who came to Washington Square last year in the middle of the night to watch the International Olympic Committee announce from Paris that Utah would host the 2034 Winter Games.

Attendees cheer after the International Olympic Committee awarded the 2034 Winter Olympic Games to the Salt Lake City-Utah Committee during a live watch party held at the Salt Lake City and County Building in Washington Square Park on July 24, 2024, in downtown Salt Lake City. Mayor Erin Mendenhall on Wednesday said the watch party was a "roll of the dice."
Attendees cheer after the International Olympic Committee awarded the 2034 Winter Olympic Games to the Salt Lake City-Utah Committee during a live watch party held at the Salt Lake City and County Building in Washington Square Park on July 24, 2024, in downtown Salt Lake City. Mayor Erin Mendenhall on Wednesday said the watch party was a "roll of the dice." (Photo: Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News)

"We really didn't know if anyone would show up," Mendenhall said. "It was a roll of the dice."

For her, the emotional highlight of the IOC's Pioneer Day decision wasn't being in the Paris meeting room where it happened. It was being able to hear the cheers of the Utah crowd through headphones.

"Whoo," she said, tearing up at the memory. Then she spotted a couple of people standing in the back of the room in brightly colored jackets that were part of the volunteer uniform in Utah's last Olympics in 2002.

"People still wear them. It's been almost a quarter century. You will see people around town still proudly wearing their 2002 gear. What kind of a party still lasts 25 years later? This one is still alive and well," Mendenhall said.

And it's one she hopes won't end.

"We're building our legacy right now for the future," the mayor said, adding, "we all think we really could become a perpetual host of the Olympics and the Paralympics. Because we know how to maintain this enthusiasm and this infrastructure."

Jackie Boleware, council member for Farmington Hills, Mich., gets her photo taken with Catherine Raney Norman, vice president of development and athlete relations for Salt Lake City-Utah 2034, following a National League of Cities panel discussion at the Utah Olympic Park in Park City on Wednesday. Raney Norman was part of a special panel discussion to help leaders understand how to learn from Utah's Olympic experience.
Jackie Boleware, council member for Farmington Hills, Mich., gets her photo taken with Catherine Raney Norman, vice president of development and athlete relations for Salt Lake City-Utah 2034, following a National League of Cities panel discussion at the Utah Olympic Park in Park City on Wednesday. Raney Norman was part of a special panel discussion to help leaders understand how to learn from Utah's Olympic experience. (Photo: Laura Seitz, Deseret News)

Utahns, including Gov. Spencer Cox, have made it clear they'd like to see the state become part of any rotation of the Winter Games among a set group of hosts. The idea recently resurfaced as part of new IOC President Kirsty Coventry's call for reviewing a number of policies.

Four-time Olympic speedskater Catherine Raney Norman, vice president of development and athlete relations for what's formally known as the Organizing Committee for the 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, also had some advice for the local leaders.

While Raney Norman said she's grateful they were learning about Utah's "secret sauce" when it comes to hosting, the 2034 Games belong to all Americans. As an Olympian, she said she represented the United States.

"We get to be the canvas for the Games, but these are America's Games," she said. "So I'm hopeful that you guys can take a little bit of what you hear today back into your communities and help to build up, and lift up, the Olympic and Paralympic movement within your communities."

Anaheim Mayor Ashleigh Aitken, whose California city will host indoor volleyball at the LA 2028 Olympics in the Honda Center, home to the Anaheim Ducks hockey team, said she appreciated hearing about involving local residents in the big event.

"I'm most interested in learning from my predecessors that were Olympic host cities in developing community, connecting people that may never have seen an Olympic sport," Aitken said, so they can "come together and really just root for their country."

The Olympics, she said, "is such a unique sports event, and it truly unifies the entire world. When you're a kid or you've never seen the Olympics before, we can offer you community gathering spaces and town squares" to cheer on athletes.

Liston Bochette III, a Fort Myers, Florida, city councilman who competed for Puerto Rico in multiple Olympics in track and field as well as bobsled, said keeping venues like Utah's sliding track up and running for decades "is the future of sports."

Still, Bochette said the Winter Games need to keep being held in new locations.

"The mayor said, 'We could do these Games over and over and over.' But you've got to move them around the world," he said. "I think they'll come back here more often than not. This is a safe place, the economy is good, the people are friendly."

Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall speaks with Tom Schmitz, city council member in New Ulm, Minn., prior to a National League of Cities panel discussion at the Utah Olympic Park in Park City on Wednesday. The panel focused on what leaders can learn from Utah's Olympic experience.
Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall speaks with Tom Schmitz, city council member in New Ulm, Minn., prior to a National League of Cities panel discussion at the Utah Olympic Park in Park City on Wednesday. The panel focused on what leaders can learn from Utah's Olympic experience. (Photo: Laura Seitz, Deseret News)
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Lisa Riley Roche, Deseret NewsLisa Riley Roche

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