As a result of London winning the bid for the 2012 Olympics
many promises were made, one of those promises was a rise in jobs especially in
the borough of Newham. As you may or may not know, Newham is one of the poorest
boroughs in the country and has been said to have one of the highest rates for
youth unemployment. A study before London won the bid found that Newham is
amongst the poorest boroughs in London. Poverty intensity in Newham is high.
One in five people in Newham lived in households with below 30% of the national
median household income compared with one in 16 in London and one in 25 in
Britain. Crucially this study found that Newham was ranked 24th for
employment deprivation in England and second in London behind Lambeth. Well
known politician Jack Straw told the House of Commons in the lead up to the
2012 games that “the games will transform one of the poorest and most deprived
areas of London. They will create thousands of new jobs and homes. They will
offer new opportunities for business in the immediate area and throughout
London.” To see if this was actually the case and whether the games made good
on promises such as Jack Straw I conducted an interview with a local university
student James Mungai on his thoughts on the situation.
Interview with former Olympic employee James Mungai
How did you come across the opportunity to work for the
Olympics?
“A couple months before the Olympics I was unemployed and
couldn’t find a job my money was really low and I remember watching the news
one night hearing there would be a lot of jobs going to help set up for the
Olympics so I thought why not apply and thankfully I got the job soon as. After
about a year out of work this was my first real job and to be honest the pay
was better than I first thought. I’m originally from East Ham so Stratford is
just a bus ride away I never would have thought growing up as a kid that the
Olympics would take place in my area so any way that I could get involved I was
going to jump at the chance, I guess you can say I helped create history”
(laughs)
What did the job involve?
“It was mainly a lot of manual labour really; lots of
lifting and stuff, working to get the venue sorted and a lot of the work were
centred on the opening ceremony. There was a lot of overtime as well which you
don’t get at most jobs so that really helped me out as well as I was trying to
save up for a car. Seeing the opening ceremony live knowing that you helped
create the set for it was really cool.”
What are some of the things you’ll take away from this
experience?
I got the chance to get involved with the biggest event
in the entire world that’s something you can tell the kids (laughs) As I worked
most of the Olympic nights I got to see a lot of the events for free which was
really really cool as I’m a big sports fan. I got to see a lot of my sporting
heroes, as I am originally from Kenya seeing David Rudisha break the world
record in the 800m was really special. I also got to see the legend that is
Usain Bolt and was even lucky enough to get a picture with Mo Farah (as seen
above)
Have you noticed any changes in Newham since the
Olympics?
Yeah a massive one to be honest, a lot of money has been
invested into the borough as a result of us getting the bid. Growing up in the
borough there wasn’t much to do so I guess that’s why kids were resorting to
crime but now there’s so many things to do it can keep them pre occupied. Stuff
such as the new Westfield being built has helped out our image we’re seen as a
more culturally vibrant place now as opposed to just being the ghetto.
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