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About the Arctic Winter Games
The Arctic Winter Games and Arctic Winter Games Team Alaska
The Arctic Winter Games is a biennial sport and cultural program that
brings together youth from the circumpolar north to compete and perform.
The governments of Alaska, the Yukon, and the Northwest Territories
created the Arctic Winter Games in the late 1960’s, during the first
Hickel Administration. The Arctic Winter Games International
Committee/Corporation (AWGIC) was formed at that time, with corporate
directors from each of the participating units. The role of the Arctic
Winter Games International Committee is to oversee the long term viability
and the strategic direction of the Games. In addition, the AWGIC is
responsible for selecting the host site for each Games three years prior
to the Games, for supervising and implementing the technical aspects of
the sport competition at the Games, and for monitoring the progress of
each Host Society as they prepare for the Games.
Yellowknife hosted the first games in 1970. The teams from those three
governmental units supplied all the participants in those original Games.
Since 1976, teams from outside the original three units have joined in the
Games. Alaska has hosted the Games in 1974, 1982, 1988 and 1996. At the
2006 Games in the Kenai Peninsula participants will include nearly 2000
young people and their coaches from Alaska, Yukon, Northwest Territories,
Nunavut, Northern Alberta, Greenland, Tyumen (Russia) and Chukotka
(Russia), as well as a Sami team drawn from the north of Norway, Sweden
and Finland. Competition will be held in 20 sports: Alpine Skiing,
Badminton, Basketball, Biathlon, Cross Country Skiing, Curling, Dene
Games, Dog Mushing, Figure Skating, Gymnastics, Ice Hockey, Indoor Soccer,
Inuit Games, Short-Track Speed Skating, Snowboarding, Snowshoe Biathlon,
Snowshoeing, Table Tennis, Volleyball and Wrestling. A group of cultural
performers from each delegation will also perform throughout the week.
The government of the State of Alaska created the Arctic Winter Games Team
Alaska Corporation to act on the state’s behalf in organizing the Alaska
Team to the Games. What was initially a very small group of athletes and
coaches participating in 10 sports, has grown to a group of approximately
375 coaches and athletes participating in 20 sports. The cost of operating
Arctic Winter Games Team Alaska through a biennial Games Cycle is
approximately $300,000, exclusive of travel costs, which can add up to
$500,000 per games, depending upon the location of the Games.
Arctic Winter Games Team Alaska is responsible for all aspects of
preparation for the Games: establishing selection procedures and criteria
for coaches and athletes in all 20 sports; for communicating information
about the Team Alaska program through the media, including the World Wide
Web, for procuring team uniforms for the opening and closing ceremonies,
as well as for competition, for arranging travel not only from Alaska to
the Games, but from outlying communities to the points from which Team
Alaska flies, or buses, to the Games, and for supervising the Team Alaska
effort at the Games by assisting and supporting the coaches and athletes
on Team Alaska to ensure that they can compete without hindrance and
otherwise participate to the fullest degree possible.
Team Alaska has been supported through a combination of state grants,
corporate sponsorships, philanthropic grants, and registration fees paid
by all members of Team Alaska. Registration fees for members of Team
Alaska are typically $450-$550, and have ranged in recent years from
$250-$750. The broad range reflects the variation in travel costs,
depending upon the location of the Games
The other principal entity in the Arctic Winter Games structure is the
Host Society. Host Society is the term used by the Arctic Winter Games
International Committee to describe the corporate entity charged with
organizing and conducting the Games. The Host Society is a completely
separate entity, in every respect, including finances, from both the
Arctic Winter Games International Committee and Arctic Winter Games Team
Alaska. Even though the 2006 Games are in Alaska, and Team Alaska will
work together with the Host Society on some aspects of the Games, the two
are completely separate.
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