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Why the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics are already an expensive nightmare for many locals and tourists

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Paris — The 2024 Paris Summer Olympics open next week, and athletes from around the world have already started arriving to prepare for the competition. France, however, has been preparing for several years, and not everyone in Paris is pleased with the disruption those preparations have brought.

Some Parisians have complained for months on social media about the state of the French capital, with some warning tourists to stay away.

“If you’re planning on coming to Paris for the Olympic Games… do not come! Do not come… The city of Paris is making it hell on earth,” one resident warned in an online rant.

City officials insist the Summer Games will be a huge success, but Parisians have fled from their city in droves, and tourism, almost counterintuitively, is down.

Construction linked to the Olympics has made moving around Paris much harder and more expensive. Prices to ride the Paris Metro system have doubled, students have been kicked off campuses to make way for Olympic staff and rents have soared.

Paris 2024 Olympic Games - Previews
Police check QR codes at a security barrier along the Seine river, to let people cross, July 20, 2024 in Paris, France, six days before the opening of the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics.

Maja Hitij/Getty


“People that were thinking about coming to Paris for holidays, most of them decided not to come because, number one, the city is very congested, number two, the prices are really high,” Gail Boisclair, who runs the Perfectly Paris property rental company, told CBS News. “The tourists just simply don’t want to deal with it.”

She said American visitors looking for a summer European vacation have largely opted to visit Spain, Britain and Ireland this year instead, and that includes some regular visitors to the City of Light.

“I have a lot of returning guests, and if they didn’t have to be here for work, they just said ‘forget 2024, we’re waiting ’til next year to come.'”

Many tourists chose to visit Paris before the Olympics, but even they have found the city unwelcoming.

First-time visitors Ian and Belinda Caulfield from Wales were surprised at how much construction there was, and how difficult it was to get around.

“I know it’s within a certain amount of the city, but if you just want to walk down the Seine, there’s a lot of obstructions,” said Ian.

Belinda said the couple found they were having to walk more than they expected because of diversions around Olympic construction sites.

Eva and Agnes from Norway also found it difficult to get where they wanted to go.

“We have traveled across the Seine over here, and it was closed, so we had to go all around a lot of buildings to get where we wanted,” said Eva.

They didn’t cancel any of their plans, but Eva said in hindsight, “it would have been better to come here next year, not this year.”

High prices for accommodation are also keeping tourists away. Hotels raised their prices more than a year ago, some asking for double the usual rates — or even higher for rooms that overlook the Seine and the area where the Opening Ceremony will take place on July 26.

FRANCE-OLY-PARIS-2024-ACCOMMODATION-TOURISM
A woman holds up her phone with the homestays app Airbnb shown on the screen as others pose in front of the Eiffel Tower and Seine River in central Paris, Feb. 2, 2024, as the city prepared for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

MIGUEL MEDINA/AFP/Getty


Many Parisians also thought it would be a good time to cash in on expected high visitor numbers by renting out their homes. But visitor numbers are down by as much as 30%, according to some studies.

“People were thinking, oh, four times as much, five times as much, who knows,” said Boisclair. Last year, she advised owners of the rental apartments she manages to raise their rates by 30% for the Games, but no more than that.

Those who followed her advice found guests immediately, she said. Others wanted to wait to try to cash in for more.

“We can retire on the income that we’ll earn for two and a half weeks during the Olympics,” was their thinking, she said. But that gamble has not paid off.

Tens of thousands of rental apartments and hotel rooms still lie empty as the market was flooded with offers. A cursory glance at popular hotel and apartment reservation sites shows prices being slashed daily — but the offers still massively outstrip demand.

Others in Paris have found themselves homeless because of the Olympics. More than 3,000 student rooms in the capital’s university campuses were commandeered for all the police and firefighters brought in for the Games.

Before the Olympic Games in Paris
National police officers walk in front of the Eiffel Tower in central Paris, July 21, 2024, less than week before the opening ceremony of the 2024 Paris Summer Olympics.

Michael Kappeler/picture alliance/Getty


While most students are off for the summer, several thousand were planning on staying in their rooms while on work placements in the capital or to continue with research projects. Several told the Le Parisien newspaper it was stressful having to move out and find somewhere else to live at a time when rents have soared.

Many who work in the tourism industry also got a nasty surprise this year. Some Parisian cafes and restaurants inside the restricted Olympic zones are considering closing their doors during the Games because it will be so difficult for people to get to them.

Some taxi drivers have said they’ll work the first few days of the Games at the end of July, and then decide if it’s worth staying in the city or, if things are quiet, just going on vacation for August.

Tour guide Lily Heise usually makes the majority of her annual income during the summer — but not this year. 

“I was very excited about Paris hosting the Olympics and had thought it would lead to increased bookings,” she told CBS News. “But over the last two months, bookings have been down around 50%. June and July are usually among the busiest months of the year for the tourism sector in Paris. The loss of income is substantial and it’s difficult to know if tourists will be back in the autumn, once the Games are over.”

The Paris Games are expected to cost $12 billion. That’s cheap for an Olympic Games – but many in Paris feel they’ve paid a higher price themselves in other ways.





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White House hasn’t weighed in on Iran hacking Trump campaign

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White House hasn’t weighed in on Iran hacking Trump campaign – CBS News


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The White House has not weighed in on reports of Iran hacking the Trump campaign for sensitive information that apparently was offered to President Biden’s campaign in the summer. CBS News senior White House and political correspondent Ed O’Keefe reports.

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North Carolina governor’s race rocked by CNN report on Mark Robinson’s alleged incendiary comments

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Editor’s note: This story contains highly offensive language. 

Washington — North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, the Republican nominee for governor, posted a slew of incendiary, explicit and racist comments on a pornographic website more than a decade ago, according to a CNN investigation released Thursday that has shaken the state’s gubernatorial race.

The report focused on comments made by an account with the name “minisoldr” on a pornographic website called Nude Africa between 2008 and 2012. The account used the name “mark robinson” in its profile and a number of biographical details posted by the account line up with Robinson’s own history, according to CNN. The network reported that Robinson appeared to use the account name on other platforms over the years, including YouTube and Pinterest, and that the email address associated with the account belonged to Robinson.

On the Nude Africa forum, the user expressed a desire to “bring [slavery] back” and “buy a few” slaves, while identifying himself as a “black NAZI,” according to CNN. 

“Slavery is not bad. Some people need to be slaves. I wish they would bring it (slavery) back. I would certainly buy a few,” the account wrote in a discussion about Black Republicans in 2010, according to CNN. 

“I like watching tranny on girl porn!” the minisoldr account also posted on Nude Africa, according to CNN. “That’s f****** hot! It takes the man out while leaving the man in! And yeah I’m a ‘perv’ too!” 

In March 2012, minisoldr posted a preference for Hitler over former President Barack Obama’s administration: “I’d take Hitler over any of the s*** that’s in Washington right now!”

Minisoldr also used racist language to vilify civil rights hero Martin Luther King Jr.

“I’m not in the KKK. They don’t let blacks join. If I was in the KKK I would have called him Martin Lucifer Koon!” the account posted in October 2011, according to CNN. 

Reports emerged earlier Thursday that CNN was planning to publish a damaging story that could lead other Republicans to call on Robinson to drop out of the race. In a video posted to X before the CNN story was published, Robinson flatly denied that he said anything in the CNN report and insisted he won’t drop out. North Carolina will begin mailing ballots to members of the military and voters outside the U.S. on Friday.

“The things that you will see in that story, those are not the words of Mark Robinson,” Robinson said in his video. “You know my words, you know my character and you know that I have been completely transparent in this race and before.”

North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson speaks during the first day of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on Monday, July 15, 2024.
North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson speaks during the first day of the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on Monday, July 15, 2024.

Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images


Robinson echoed those comments in an interview with CNN. “This is not us. These are not our words. And this is not anything that is characteristic of me,” Robinson said, adding that he wouldn’t “get into the minutia of how somebody manufactured this, these salacious tabloid lies” when presented with evidence that the account belonged to him.

Robinson, who is 56 and married with two children, has a history of inflammatory remarks that have widely circulated since he won the state’s Republican primary in March. Serving as North Carolina’s lieutenant governor since 2021, he gained prominence in Republican circles after he delivered a pro-gun rights speech that went viral and kickstarted his political career. He’s made inflammatory comments across a number of topics — from Islam to abortion to feminism — but he’s been especially vocal on LGBTQ+ issues. 

If elected, Robinson would become the first Black governor of North Carolina. Former President Donald Trump, who endorsed Robinson for governor, has referred to him as “Martin Luther King on steroids.”

The lieutenant governor blamed the CNN report on his Democratic opponent, North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein. 

“You all have seen the half truths and outright lies of Josh Stein,” Robinson said, claiming that Stein leaked the story to CNN. 

The report’s release has spurred concern among Republicans about their nominee’s prospects in the coming election. Sen. Ted Budd, a North Carolina Republican, told reporters ahead of its release on Thursday that “North Carolinian voters are smart, and they know how to pick each and every candidate based on their own merits.”

When asked whether Robinson should step down, Budd said he didn’t have enough information. 

“They’ve been assaulting him for years,” Budd said before the article was published. “We’re going to gather our facts through the weekend.”

contributed to this report.





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Costco supplier recalls waffles sold at warehouse stores in 13 states

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Costco’s first membership price hike takes effect


Costco’s first membership price hike takes effect

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Certain boxes of waffles sold at Costco Wholesale stores in the Midwest are being recalled because they may contain plastic, according to a notice by supplier Kodiak Cakes.

The recall involves Kodiak Power Waffles Buttermilk & Vanilla 40 count with the UPC code 705599019203 and a use-by date of Jan. 10, 2026, and only impacts products with the lot code 24193-WL4 and a time stamp of 12:00-23:00, according to the Park City, Utah-based company. 

The recalled products were sold at Costco warehouses in 13 states: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin. 

The action was initiated “due to the potential presence of soft plastic film,” according to Kodiak, which noted that no injuries or illnesses had been reported. 

Those who purchased the recalled product can return it to their local Costco for a refund. 

People with questions can email Kodiak at: flapjacks@kodiakcakes.com or call 801-328-4067. Messages will be returned between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mountain time, Monday through Friday.



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