Salt Lake Tribune
Weekly Ad Specials
Message begins long trip to Turin
This is an archived article that was published on sltrib.com in 2005, and information in the article may be outdated. It is provided only for personal research purposes and may not be reprinted.

A message of "peace, youth and the environment" started its four-month, 6,000-mile journey from Salt Lake City to Turin on Monday as the Italian city prepares to host the 2006 Winter Olympics.

The message - rolled into a container decorated with a peace symbol, leaf and stick figure - will be biked to New York, sailed across the Atlantic Ocean in a yacht, and biked and hiked from Belgium to Turin, where it will be delivered to Mayor Sergio Chiamparino at the end of July.

Lillehammer, Norway, started the tradition when it sent a message to Nagano, Japan, in 1997. In 2001, Nagano delivered one to Salt Lake City. As part of the tradition, the message cannot be sent using fossil fuels, though the delivery team will travel to Europe via airplane.

Along the route, bicyclists - including Jeff Niermeyer, deputy director of Salt Lake City's Department of Public Utilities, and Park City resident and bike racer Marc Wangsgard - will stop at schools to share the message. A video diary will be produced about the trip. And a Web site, http://slc2torino.com, will track the journey. The site also includes text of Salt Lake City's message.

Deputy Mayor Rocky Fluhart and his wife and the mayor's friend Bill Underwood and his wife will carry the message in Europe. Mayor Rocky Anderson will join the crew in Milan in late July for the last leg of the journey.

Most of the $156,000 cost will be paid by sponsors, though $20,000 will come from city coffers. It was reallocated from the canceled Winterfest celebra- tion.

The fund will pay for the city employees' trip. The other team members are paying their own ways.

hmay@sltrib.com

Olympic hosts: SLC maintains a tradition started by Lillehammer
Article Tools

 
Affiliates and Partners