The
London 2012 Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic
Games (LOCOG) today moves to the next phase of the Games
Maker programme by starting to offer candidates a volunteering
role at the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
10,000 applicants
will be notified by email this week that, subject to the
required security checks, they have been chosen for a volunteer
role as a London 2012 Games Maker. The offers made today
are the first of thousands of emails which will be sent
to applicants over the coming months.
Due to the volume
of applicants and scale of the Games Maker programme, which
is presented by McDonald’s, applicants who have already
attended a Games Maker interview, but do not receive an
email this week, should continue to check their emails regularly
as LOCOG will make offers of roles until the end of April
2012.
Among the first applicants
contacted today are Nader Mozakka , from
North West London who will be an NOC Assistant in the Athletes’
Village, Steve Tarrant , from Poole who
has been assigned a role as a medal/flower bearer at the
sailing venue in Weymouth and Portland; Maggie Hendry
from Dundee who will be a Physiotherapist at North
Greenwich Arena at Games time; Erin Morgan
from Newry who will be an Event Services team member at
the Olympic Park and Charlotte Evans from
Caerleon who has been assigned a role as an Event Services
Team Member for Wimbledon.
LOCOG needs up to
70,000 volunteers for the Olympic and Paralympic Games and
will continue to make conditional offers through a rolling
programme of monthly offers between now and April 2012.
With interviews being conducted until the end of March 2012,
those yet to be invited to interview have every opportunity
of being selected as a Games Maker and are encouraged to
check their emails regularly for further correspondence.
Sebastian
Coe, Chair of LOCOG, said : ‘It has been a privilege
for my team to meet and interview so many enthusiastic and
dedicated people from right across the UK who would like
to volunteer with us and make the Games a success for athletes,
media and spectators alike. Beginning to make offers of
roles this week marks the next stage of the Games Maker
programme to put the best possible team together to welcome
the world next summer.
‘Given the numbers
of people involved, conditional offers will be made in several
stages and with interviews set to continue until the end
of March 2012, there is still plenty of time for applications
to progress. I wish everyone who offered us their time the
best of luck with their application and encourage them to
keep checking their email for updates.’
Games Makers receiving
an email this week with details of the conditional offer
will be asked to confirm their acceptance of the role within
two weeks of receiving the email to allow the required Home
Office and CRB checks to be undertaken. Games Makers will
be asked to log on to Games Maker Zone and accept their
role.
Upon successful completion
of the checks, Games Makers will receive further details
of the training sessions to take place from February 2012
onwards.
By 31 December 2011,
everyone who has applied to be a Games Maker will hear from
London 2012. They will either have been offered a role,
been interviewed and yet to be offered a role, received
an invitation to interview for a date in 2012 or been told
that they have been unsuccessful as an applicant.
LOCOG expects to
begin notifying candidates who are not successful with their
application to be a Games Maker from November 2011. The
high quality and number of applications means it will not
be possible to offer everyone a Games Maker position. The
standard was so high, selection has been a challenge for
the London 2012 team.
A quarter of a million
people applied to the Games Maker programme last year and
a team of specially trained volunteer interviewers has been
carrying out selection interviews since February 2011. Since
the application process closed in October 2010, LOCOG has
removed 60,000 incomplete applications having made multiple
approaches to candidates to encourage them to complete their
application. This means the chances of being called forward
for interview has increased for remaining applicants.
Out of the 100,000
interviews which will be conducted over the course of the
programme, over 50,000 interviews have taken place to date
in nine selection centres around the UK. Interviews will
continue in London’s selection centre at ExCel through to
the end of March 2012.
Minister
for the Olympics, Hugh Robertson, said: ‘I would
like to congratulate all those who have been offered Games
Maker roles. The competition for places has been intense
with considerable numbers of high quality candidates putting
their names forward. The Games Makers will be integral to
the success of the Games and in particular the impression
we make upon the global sports family.’
The Mayor
of London, Boris Johnson, said: ‘Games Maker volunteers
will provide welcoming faces around the venues to athletes,
spectators and the world's media when they descend on our
great city next year. Combined with the forces of my London
Ambassadors, part of our ever growing Team London volunteer
army, we will be in great shape to give people coming to
the capital in 2012 a truly unforgettable experience.’
Worldwide Olympic
Partner McDonald’s is the Presenting Partner of the Games
Maker volunteer programme. McDonald’s has used its nationwide
presence to help attract candidates for the diverse team
that will be needed to make the London 2012 Games a success.
The LOCOG Volunteer team held training sessions for many
of the volunteers conducting interviews at the world-class
training facilities at McDonald’s head office in East Finchley,
London and the restaurant chain will also be helping to
facilitate the training of the volunteers in the run up
to Games time.
Jill McDonald,
CEO McDonald’s UK, said: ‘Our people are at the
heart of our business and we’re proud to have been able
to share our expertise in customer service and people development
with the Organising Committee to help select the very best
team of volunteers for the London Games.
‘Being able to draw
on comparisons between the high energy levels and strength
of teamwork required by our staff, day in day out across
our 1,200 restaurants in the UK will mean we are well placed
to support LOCOG in the training of these Games Makers.
As we enter the next stage of this programme we aim to help
provide the volunteers with the skills, knowledge and confidence
to deliver an outstanding level of hospitality at the Olympic
and Paralympic Games next year.’
LOCOG is looking
for enthusiastic, committed and friendly people to be the
face of the Games and show the world what the UK is all
about: excellence, passion and positivity .
The Games Makers will undertake a wide variety of
specialist and generalist roles at the Olympic and Paralympic
Games including checking tickets, running information desks,
distributing uniform, assisting on the field of play, and
working in the medical services team. For more details of
the roles available please go to www.london2012.com/volunteering
LOCOG recently announced
details of the Young Games Maker roles which will see over
2,000 young people recruited to take up volunteer roles
alongside the adult Games Makers. Approximately 250 teams
of young people, who must be aged 16 or over on 1 July 2012
and under 18 on 1 January 2012 will join the adult Games
Makers next summer to help stage the London 2012 Olympic
and Paralympic Games. Applications for generalist Young
Games Maker role open tomorrow on 22 September 2011 and
must be made by adult team leaders from organisations such
as sports clubs, community groups and schools and colleges
in the Get Set Network. Applications will be received until
31 October 2011 at
www.london2012.com/younggamesmaker
.
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