Rocky hands off Olympic message
A bicycle contingent led by Mayor Rocky Anderson completed Salt Lake City's last Olympic commitment as it delivered the city's Olympic message to the 2006 Winter Games host, Torino, Italy.
That's not to say this final step was easy. Anderson described it as "a minor miracle."
According to Olympic tradition, Salt Lake City leaders had to deliver a message of peace, youth and environment to Torino about 5,400 miles away, as the crow flies using environmentally friendly modes of transportation that didn't burn fossil fuels.
It meant bicycling the message to New York, sailing it to Brussels and bicycling it over the Alps to the northern Italian city.
One day on a steep climb though the French Alps, Anderson had to quit 10 kilometers from the summit and ride the rest of the way in a support van.
While some on the seven-member contingent including Anderson's girlfriend Tracy Lyon, Deputy Mayor Rocky Fluhart and his wife Gretchen, Park City couple Bill and Celia Underwood and Avenues resident Sarah Wright had trained for long, steep bike rides, Anderson hadn't.
Another day, the biking party, unable to read French, took a wrong turn and biked 40 kilometers in the wrong direction.
Other times they would arrive in a quaint European village, bushed from a day of biking over 100 miles, only to find their hotel had no vacancies.
"The main thing was just working with the whole team to solve problems," Wright said. "Finding directions and figuring out routes and getting to places where we were going to stay and not having rooms."
Wright, who works with Utah Clean Energy, was invited to participate in the European leg of the journey because of her advocacy for cleaner fuels.
Anderson said it was important that he, as mayor, deliver the message personally to Torino Mayor Sergio Chiamparino. His presence underlined the importance of the message, which called for the international community to take action to solve problems of health care, poverty, human rights, climate change and genocide in developing nations.
"When you're discussing the need for international cooperation in meeting major human rights and medical challenges, especially in developing countries and also addressing a global environmental crisis like climate change and the need for countries to come together, I think it's important for the mayor to signify the fundamental importance of all of us working together to meet these challenges by putting in this sort of effort," he said.




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