Many people around the world are eagerly awaiting the start of the Olympics next week. A lucky few will compete and a small group of others will be there, in person, to watch. Athletes and spectators, however, are just two of the groups that the games mobilize. The Daily Mail reports on the large numbers of people hired to be temporary janitors, groundskeepers, maids, and other types of cleaners. Many of these workers are migrants who have come to London hoping to work for a few weeks and return to their families having earned a little more than they otherwise could.
The story, sent in by Dolores R., focuses on the living conditions of these workers. Most are paying rent to live in temporary trailers. Packed together like sardines, the compound has been described as a “slum.” Pictures are available at the site.
Complaints include:
- Crowded living spaces. “Any accommodation where more than two adults have to share a room is considered ‘overcrowded’ under housing laws.”
- Insufficient toilet and shower facilities that were “filthy” from overuse.
- Leaking trailers that the workers are told to live with or fix themselves; stagnant ground water around some of the trailers has forced them to put together make-shift stepping stones.
- Women are being placed in trailers with men they don’t know; at least two women have quit when they were told they had to stay with male strangers.
The Daily Mail says that the employees have signed gag orders that prevent them from talking to the press and that family and friends are barred from the camp for “security reasons.”
Via The Sociologist.
Lisa Wade, PhD is an Associate Professor at Tulane University. She is the author of American Hookup, a book about college sexual culture; a textbook about gender; and a forthcoming introductory text: Terrible Magnificent Sociology. You can follow her on Twitter and Instagram.
Comments 21
Yrro Simyarin — July 19, 2012
The water leak situation and keeping family away sounds like a mess and abuse... but the rest of it sounds pretty much like my college dorm...
cielo — July 19, 2012
Not surprising. There was a scandal not unlike this in conjunction with the Queen's Diamond Jubilee last month -- http://m.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/jun/04/jubilee-pageant-unemployed?cat=uk&type=article -- basically they had people sleeping under bridges with no facilities/food and for no pay in some cases as part of a workforce partnership program that some of the laborers thought would lead to employment during the Olympics. I don't know if this is the same contractor as the trailers in the post, but same ethics for sure. a different contractor has been in the spotlight this week for failing to train enough security guards. Seems to me like it's all symptomatic of contracting everything out to the lowest bidder. It's the laborer who loses out, not surprisingly.
Estella — July 19, 2012
This kind of thing is the inevitable result of treating people like means to an end instead of ends in themselves.
East-London — July 19, 2012
Newham Council (who permitted this accommodation) is one of London's poorest boroughs and also has a big problem with garden sheds illegally let as housing: http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/may/09/london-landlords-desperate-tenants
Newham's mayor, Sir Robin Wales, is dismayed. "It's big money. You get a few breeze blocks, sling up some crappy old shed in your back garden, and now you're making hundreds and hundreds of pounds a week. It doesn't take long for you to make a lot of money out of it, provided you are prepared to trade in human misery.
So I can't figure out exactly where they stand on this issue.
Olympic “Slums”: Housing for Migrant Workers in London « The Augmented Environment — July 19, 2012
[...] (View original at http://thesocietypages.org/socimages) [...]
Vadim McNab — July 20, 2012
I am surprised this still fazes some people. Welcome to a world with 6 billion people, and growing fast.
HappyFunNorm — July 20, 2012
I don't know about a dorm (at least these days, mine had a whole floor sharing a bathroom, but I hear they're like apartments these days) but it does sound a lot like a barracks, which is really what it is as near as I can tell. Except for the leaking, it's exactly what I would expect for a large, temporary workforce.
What are the other possible options?
Putting them all up in hotel rooms? I can imagine they're all occupied over most of the area.
Unless there's lots of unrented apartments, that's not really an option. Can't build a big "permanent" structure, it would have taken too long and been too expensive for temporary use.
If they did have a building to use, they would likely have to buss all the people in.. in the middle of a situation that is already taxing the road use.
Honestly, I'm kind of surprised they just didn't use tents. Honestly, I would not have expected accommodations that nice if I was taking part in something like this. Given the space they had to work with, I can't really think of a better way to do this...
Henry B. — July 21, 2012
I see little difference between this and the accommodation that soldiers has to put up with a lot of places overseas (Afghanistan, Iraq)
JohnMWhite — July 21, 2012
I am fairly sure that having housing so close together that you can't get any sunlight in your windows has been illegal in the UK since the mid 19th century. If the landlords are not able to maintain sanitary conditions, that would be against the law as well. Naturally, nothing will be done, because it's the Olympics so they get a pass. We wouldn't want to embarrass the government by holding them to account for their callous disregard for human misery when there are some games going on.
The word Panem comes to mind. Ultimately, though, this is the result of unfettered capitalism and a collaborating government who are happy to enact strict austerity that punishes the people who had nothing to do with rigging the financial system and bringing it crashing down. Everything that involves people is done as cheaply and shoddily as possible, but there will always be plenty of money to throw at corporations, for example with the UK suspending taxation on corporate profits for the duration of the games for those companies that are sponsoring it. Even McDonalds found that a bit too much to swallow and waived their exemption.
olsonam — July 21, 2012
It seems like more temporary toilets and possibly showers would be easy enough and not even that expensive.
Asking women to sleep in the same rooms as strange men is ridiculous and there's definitely a better way to do that.
Asking for 550 pounds of rent per month per person is not what anyone would expect, I'm sure.
I'd be interested in seeing if this really is temporary or if it stays
as a new low people ought to expect and be happy with because it's
better than nothing.
Patrick — July 23, 2012
Standard worker accomodation in China. They saw it work for China, so it will work for London. This was promised to be the Olympics for the people, but it has turned out that they think China is best, so eff the people, just give me the money.
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Summer — October 21, 2012
Thanks for this insightful look at the immigrant workers of the Olympics. I was inspired by this post to draft a paper for a sport sociology course that touched on this topic. It is important that people see beyond the superficial gala and actually look at who is necessary in producing these events.
How Sochi’s Olympic Facilities Were Built On Migrant Abuse And Wage Theft — February 7, 2014
[…] 2012 London Summer Olympics, migrant workers lived in temporary trailers that some described as “slums.” They were vulnerable to long working hours and low wages. At the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics […]