The idea of an independent Brisbane 2032 Olympics infrastructure delivery authority has taken a few turns over the years: first as part of the bid team’s future host process, then it was no longer.
In December, as part of Steven Miles’ ascension to becoming premier, it was back on – then legislated in May, and an interim chief executive appointed from July.
Loading
But the seven independent board directors of what has been dubbed the Games Venue and Legacy Delivery Authority are yet to be appointed by the nine Games partners.
As it turns out, the Brisbane 2032 Organising Committee chair Andrew Liveris and Brisbane Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner had written to State Development Minister Grace Grace.
The reason? They didn’t want appointments made before the October 26 state election, Grace said in a statement. “The government has agreed to this request.”
But it’s unclear how this sits with the LNP’s pledge to have its own body to run a 100-day review, which deputy leader Jarrod Bleijie reaffirmed would not consider new stadiums. The LNP and Schrinner have been contacted for comment.
The organising committee, which includes Miles, Liveris, Schrinner, Grace, and a raft of others, is meeting in Cairns today.