Governments are desperate to fund elite sport - and it's leaving the grassroots to wither

By Chris Lewis / Roar Guru

Australian governments of all levels should apply equity considerations when funding sport and recreation needs, in line with 2022 data which indicates that football has 1.25 million participants, basketball 995,000, Australian Rules 620,000, rugby league 198,000, rugby union 146,000, and field hockey 198,000.

But, as sports funding trends stand, something needs to give if Australia is to more adequately address grassroots sport.

While sports such as football have high participation numbers on overused fields (as evident most in Sydney), the increasing role played by state (and federal) governments to support elite sport, major events and stadium construction, ultimately diminishes their ability to help local governments meet their local parks and infrastructure needs.

(Photo by Brendon Thorne/Getty Images)

Whereas the ABS indicates that local government provided around 50 per cent of the total $2.1 billion spent on sport and recreation during the 2000-01 financial year, research by ABC journalists suggests its proportion of funding had increased to 65 per cent of the $11.5 billion of public funds provided in 2021.

Have local governments been reasonably fair to the different sports? Only sports insiders involved in community sports can answer this question, yet 2008 data from the Southern Sydney Regional Organisation of Councils (12 local councils) indicates 1 football field for every 4,000 people, 1 cricket pitch per 5,300 people, 1 rugby league/union field per 17,000 people, 1 Baseball/softball diamond per 22,800 people, 1 shared use field per 41,500 people, 1 hockey field per 68,000 people, 1 Australian Rules field per 68,000 people, and 1 athletics track per 76,000 people.

But today local governments are expected to uphold grassroots sports infrastructure needs despite their own revenue struggles to meet increasing community expectations at a time when grants from the federal government alone have declined from 1 per cent of Commonwealth tax revenue under the Hawke government to 0.55 per cent.

At the same time, state governments have spent considerable sums on world class stadiums to help the major sporting codes and events, despite the contribution from state and territory government to total sport and recreation public funding declining from 40 per cent in 2000-01 to 30 per cent by 2021 if the ABC research is to be believed.

Perth Stadium. (Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

Based on 2023 dollars that allow for inflation, the final cost to state governments for recent stadiums include $2.2 billion for the Perth Stadium, $980 million for the Sydney Football Stadium, $775 million for the reconstructed Adelaide Oval, $402 million for the Western Sydney stadium, $380 million for the Melbourne Rectangular Stadium and $262 for an upgraded Kardinia Park (Geelong).

For football fans, knowing that existing fields cannot cope with growing numbers of participants (especially Sydney), some resent the assistance directed by state and federal governments to the Australian Football league (AFL) and National Rugby league (NRL), despite such leagues receiving hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue from television rights deals, sponsorship and high attendances.

Although expenditure on modern stadiums helps all football codes host big club and international matches, one critical study points to the AFL and NRL securing $192 million (15 projects) and $124 million (14 projects) for high-performance centres from 2010 to 2019.

The problems confronting grassroots sports and need for urgent action were evident in a 2018 report commissioned by the Northern Sydney Region Organisation of Councils, in line with the reality that local councils do not have the income to fund land acquisition.

Suggested policies included:

(Photo by Kelly Barnes/Getty Images)

The potential for football codes to share fields is illustrated by Brisbane’s Mitchelton Soccer Club (northern Brisbane) playing on an artificial field (costing $1.5 million) since 2019 with both FIFA and rugby union certification.

But the problems confronting grassroots sport in terms of a shortage of playing fields and sports facilities cannot go away without greater assistance from state and/or federal governments in terms of the funding mix between elite and grassroots sport.

With total Australian government spending on sport and recreation comparing well with most OECD countries at 1.16 per cent as of 2019, it would be unrealistic to expect governments to simply increase spending at a time of a major cost of living crisis as the country increasingly struggles to meet old and new policy needs.

The September 2021 publication Social infrastructure in Melbourne’s growth areas already shows that the Victorian Government was spending an average $50,000, and local governments $38,000, on infrastructure to support each new home in Melbourne’s growth areas whereas developer contributions averaged around $23,000 for each home, a reality that helps explain the large gap in funding which results in a lack of sporting infrastructure for new residents.

The 2021 National State of the Assets Report also indicated the fiscal difficulties faced by Australia’s local governments with their park and recreation assets needing urgent repair having a replacement cost of $1.3 billion, those with poor function $1.1 billion and those with poor capacity $1.4 billion, yet these amounts are dwarfed by the $51 billion needed to address all other poor quality infrastructure with up to $138 billion needed to replace infrastructure in a fair condition.

Crowds at the MCG. (Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

In such a climate, a 2022 ABC report noted how less sporting infrastructure leads to lower participation rates and poorer health outcomes in new suburbs, while the closure of existing infrastructure – such as swimming pools in Western Sydney because of high rebuilding costs – can also lead to overcrowding and strain on remaining facilities.

And with key players supporting the NSW Productivity Commission’s recent push for greater building heights and denser development even in Sydney’s most affluent suburbs, despite opponents noting that the inner ring of Sydney is already much denser than further west, participation opportunities can only worsen as the population increases in line with the existing number of fields.

We can only hope that state and federal governments adopt policies that can more adequately balance elite and grassroots sport in terms of funding, perhaps boosted by a national lottery that funds sport as the United Kingdom does (although it is worth noting that the latter has one of the lowest proportions of total government spending on sport and recreation at 0.42 per cent).

As it stands, however, state governments continue to target big events and fund large stadiums with the Queensland government to rebuild the GABBA for the 2032 Olympic Games (50,000 capacity) at a present cost of $2.7 billion, with the Victorian government likely to fund much of the cost of rebuilding the MCG’s southern stand having provided $500 million assistance to the AFL in 2018 (including $225 million to the Docklands stadium and precinct).

While the 2022-23 Victorian Budget noted that it had spent $1.2 billion on community sport and recreation infrastructure since 2014, the upgrades to the Melbourne Park precinct alone from 2010 to end of 2021 cost $970 million to improve related stadiums and facilities in a bid to secure the Australian Open tennis for years to come.

The Gabba. (Photo by Kelly Defina/Getty Images)

Quite simply, there are only few examples of the prosperous sporting leagues paying a considerable proportion of stadium upgrades, as was the case when private sector paid $857 million ($2023) to build Docklands and contributed $565 million towards the total $688 million cost of the MCG’s new northern stand.

In the case of Victoria, the desire to please elite sport means less resources for grassroots sport. For example, while the 2019-20 Victorian Budget provided $21.6 million to upgrade community soccer facilities across Victoria, the Victorian government in May 2021 also provided $101 million to La Trobe University’s Sports Park (Bundoora) to include a world-class training base for Football Australia to train its national women’s squads there (opened 3 July 2023), as well as the State Rugby Centre of Excellence to help elite rugby union teams and players.

And while the federal government provided an important $200 million to women’s sport to provide better sporting facilities following the 2023 World Cup, they have also provided $126 million (2023 dollars) to help build the Nth Queensland stadium and $240 million for the planned Hobart stadium to ease the burden on the Tasmanian government, who committed $375 million as the AFL demanded a new stadium to enable a 19th AFL team.

But while the Australian Olympic Committee chair Matt Carroll argued in 2023 that Australian sport faced a $2 billion shortfall over the next decade, and the major sporting leagues and events continue to call for assistance from state governments who compete with each to other for major events, it remains to be seen whether the federal and state governments prove capable of doing much more to help grassroots sport.

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-06T23:17:44+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


not sure if you’re familiar with Brisbane’s precincts. I guess you are, but when they say precinct I think of the Kelvin Grove precinct or the Boggo Road precinct. They’re probably better described as suburban centres.

2023-09-06T14:07:16+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


every stadium includes the precincts though. And the figures can be expanded or reduced by Qld Gov as part of the Gabba precinct is the new Gabba station and area above it.

2023-09-06T14:06:02+00:00

East Coast Aces

Roar Rookie


is that the irony of my comment or the actual point of my comment ? Murdoch media a major owner of Broncos, main broadcaster of league. NINE a major broadcaster of league and union. So yeah of course they aren't going to highlight the controversy or corruption of sports rorts and other pork barrelling. That's why I said conflicts of interest.

AUTHOR

2023-09-03T00:27:58+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


Thanks sheek. I am also doing one on elite sports funding.

2023-09-02T21:43:39+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Chris Lewis, Good article. I'll need to re-read it again sometime today to fully absorb your message.

2023-09-01T03:20:51+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Forgot to mention that at the new pavillion there is no undercover area ither - so you either bake in the Sun on wonderful stone pavers, or get soaking wet and slip over on the sonte pavers

2023-09-01T03:11:16+00:00

Nathan Absalom

Roar Guru


Interesting comment. When I was a kid, rego for Guildford Leagues cricket season was $8, kit, balls, ground hire etc paid for by pokies. Same at Parra and Holroyd (Merrylands bowlo). Loads of junior sporting clubs were funded by RSL clubs etc. I stopped playing/coaching six or seven years ago but even then there were lots of discussions in and around clubs of how it was getting harder to get the donations for sporting clubs, and how the amalgamation of clubs was funneling funding away from grassroots. I'd like to see an analysis of how this has changed over time, it's probably written somewhere as I haven't looked for it at all. But the more I hear the dismissal of clubs generating money solely for semi and professional sport, the more I wonder if the anecdotal evidence is pointing to an underlying structural shift.

2023-09-01T02:23:15+00:00

Munro Mike

Roar Rookie


it's a good point though - - the sizing of change rooms varies across different sport - - so in some cases at very least having partitioning so as to have flexibility. Then of course..........there's the showers......

AUTHOR

2023-09-01T01:46:44+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


this is happening in Albury at moment. April 4, 2023 By Mark Stavroulakis Albury United Soccer Club’s plans to upgrade Jelbart Park have been given a push over the line thanks to a $150,000 NSW Football Legacy Fund grant. The NSW Football Legacy Fund (NFLF) aims to improve football facilities, support infrastructure, and increase participation opportunities, while improving female player pathways. Legacy grant aims to improve the current standards at Jelbart Park and give the Albury United Soccer Club, as well as the broader Albury region, a home with durability to the turbulent weather and high football demand. The work set to be completed includes a renovation of existing amenities, new field lighting and a restoration of the playing surface including returfing, drainage, and irrigation. In addition, there will be a scoreboard installed. Albury United Soccer Club President Justin Stevens discussed the vital need for the approved works. “Ground 3 is pretty much rendered useless for our training at night-time, there are no lights at all,” he said “When we lose one field, it starts to impact other clubs when we are such a huge club with big numbers”. The works, due to commence in the back half of 2023, are directly in line with the NSW Football Infrastructure Strategy key pillars of ‘Improving Existing Venue Capacity’ and ‘Planning for Growth and Demand’. Drainage, irrigation, and lighting play a crucial role in ensuring fields can remain open during the winter season and accommodate extended periods of use. Albury City Mayor Kylie King was ecstatic to see the funding come through. “To know that the Legacy Fund will come into our grassroots community, from a mayor’s perspective, I’m so proud and thrilled,” King said. “World Cup fever, we are certainly amongst it!” Albury United SC boast an impressive 26% of all participants being female and continue to accommodate for roughly 250 participants per season. NSW Football Legacy Fund Grants and Facilities Officer James Spanoudakis acknowledged the contributions of the local club. “Albury United Soccer Club have put a monumental effort into attaining this grant to develop their facilities at Jelbart Park,” he said. “It will allow their female participants to play in an environment that is safe and inclusive. The work being completed will no doubt help accommodate for the expected increase in participation thanks to the FIFA Women’s World Cup on home soil.”

2023-09-01T00:56:46+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Ha, our main oval just got an $11m upgrade to the football oval & changerooms/viewing area so they can host AFL games. The chagnerooms are too small for AFL, the gap between the boundary and the concrete around the edge is too small, the canteen is inadequate and they only put in 3 toilets meaning the 4 finals (over 2 leagues) are requiring $18k in porta-potties to be supplied. Of and the Netballers - have a garage like shed

2023-08-31T23:48:20+00:00

Munro Mike

Roar Rookie


#Macca At many levels 'paid' local footballers is a problem and that's one of the reasons the AFL has pushed the 'points' system on recruits to try to limit the capacity for the 'haves' to just load up entirely. Don't want a Euro soccer league scenario of the top 2 or 3 being light years ahead of the rest.

2023-08-31T23:46:11+00:00

Munro Mike

Roar Rookie


my home town in Gippsland - a couple of years ago opened the new netball change rooms as part of a $1.45 million rec reserve 'face lift'. "On one side of the social rooms, there are spacious new football and cricket home and away changerooms, umpire’s rooms, administration and first aid rooms, while on the other side of the complex, there are new netball changerooms and umpire’s rooms convenient to both the netball court and the social rooms." For the netballers - it came after the provision of professional surface grade court, shed and upgraded lights, installed in 2017. So........a nice example of a local FNC (Football Netball Club) in combination with the Cricket club and the community facilities. And more local to where I live now - the Diamond Creek netball club has recently been majorly upgraded.

2023-08-31T23:35:32+00:00

Munro Mike

Roar Rookie


#East Coast Aces The irony of your comment: "Great article and a topic not talked about enough in the media and gov due to conflicts of interest." Is of course that in the previous Fed govt - that while the ABC was trying to report on "Sports Rorts" that Murdoch and other conservatives friendly media were trying to ignore it. And of course Gladys came crashing down with her “inclination to support” a $5.5m grant for a shooting complex in Wagga Wagga.

2023-08-31T21:32:08+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


I investigated a couple of grants, they told me I had to go through council- who have known about theissu for decades :laughing: :laughing: As for rye clubs getting money, 1 had a wealthy farmer with no kids leave them a ton, another has a Sunday market they rent stalls for but the others I don’t kknow. I do know it’s creating a big split between the haves and have nots

AUTHOR

2023-08-31T09:39:01+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


sorry, that first response to Nathan was actually meant for Munro Mike Roar Rookie August 30th 2023 @ 4:26pm. I need to slow down sometimes and check what I am doing.

AUTHOR

2023-08-31T08:04:14+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


I have worked in factories, building sites, parliament and universities, and that figure is about right imo. I think a lot are competent, but few are prepared to go outside their comfort zone to work hard and stay fair to all.

2023-08-31T08:01:18+00:00

Lionheart

Roar Rookie


estimates I've read are between 12-20 % of managers and executives, across the board, are competent. The rest - umm.

AUTHOR

2023-08-31T07:43:53+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


i once worked for first federal politician to go to jail, and another state MP who was forced out of parliament. Sadly, disappointment can be anywhere, just as there can be very good people.

AUTHOR

2023-08-31T07:41:11+00:00

Chris Lewis

Roar Guru


Macca, hopefully council can get lights for courts. Has club made submissions for grants? How does your local football league get the money to pay such a high amount to players? i take it grog, sponsors and tickets sales.

2023-08-31T07:22:10+00:00

Brainstrust

Roar Rookie


Thats not true generally pokies fund professional and semi professional sport. Easts are the one club that would have dissapeared ages ago without the pokies, the pokies are what funds most NRL clubs particularly in Sydney. If you take out the pokies your left with South Sydney. AFL tried to copy NRL but haven't had the same level of gambling success. AFL expansion clubs in QLD took the pokie money from grassroots to put it into the professional level.

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