Seventy-one percent of respondents felt that they 'belonged' to their local area, a finding that was again more true for non-white (79%) respondents that 'white' respondents (65%), and across the six host boroughs the figures ranged from 76% in Hackney to 65% in Barking and Dagenham.
Figure C-31: Proportion of respondents 'agreeing' that they 'belong' to the local area
Note: Red line shows the total for all respondents.
Eighty-one per cent of respondents agreed that their local area was a place where people from different backgrounds 'get on well together' – a view that was supported by both the 'white' (79%) and non-white (83%) respondents alike. However, there was again significant variation between the six host boroughs with a 21 percentage point difference between Hackney – the highest at 88% – and Barking and Dagenham – the lowest at 67%.
Figure C-32: Proportion of respondents 'agreeing' that from different backgrounds get on well together
Note: Red line shows the total for all respondents.
Over a third (37%) of respondents agree that the Games has made people from different backgrounds in their local area get on better; while the same proportion disagree. Here the views of non-white and white respondents differ: with 50% of the non-white respondents agreeing and only 29% disagreeing compared to 28% and 42% respectively for the 'white' respondents.
Again, there is a disparity of views across the host borough with respondents living in Newham more likely to agree (51%) and less likely to disagree (27%), as opposed to respondents living in Barking and Dagenham who were less likely to agree (29%) and more likely to disagree (49%).
Figure C-33: Proportion of respondents 'agreeing' that the 2012 Games has made people from different backgrounds get on better
Note: Red line shows the total for all respondents.
When asked about a series of specific community issues (see Figure C-34) the majority of respondents did not view them as a problem in the local area.
Figure C-34: The extent to which community issues are a problem in the local area
Perhaps more significantly, an overwhelming majority of respondents felt that the preparations for hosting the 2012 Games had made no difference to these problems in the local area.
Figure C-35: The extent to which the preparation of the 2012 Games have exacerbated the problems in the local area
(ix)Access to jobs
Just under half (45%) of the respondents agreed that the hosting of the 2012 Games in East London had increased the number of jobs available to local residents; 29% disagreed and 13% neither agreed nor disagreed or didn't know. Those respondents aged 16-24 were notably more likely to agree (60%) than those respondents in other age groups. While those respondents who lived in Newham and Tower Hamlets were also more likely to agree (64% and 51% respectively) than those in Barking and Dagenham (32%) and Greenwich (36%) (see Figure C-36).
Figure C-36: Proportion of respondents 'agreeing' that the 2012 Games has increased the number of jobs available to local residents
Note: Red line shows the total for all respondents.
These responses are likely to be related in part to the fact that only 4% of respondents had directly (either personally (2%) or through members of their household(2%) benefited from employment opportunities – lasting or due to last more than one year – resulting from the preparation of the Games: 2% on the Olympic Park; 1% in at Olympic venues and facilities; and 1% at Westfield Shopping Centre.
Four per cent of respondents also noted that they had benefited (either personally (2%) or through a member of the household (2%) from employment opportunities related to the Games that have or are due to last for less than a year.
Taken together these results suggest that 7% of respondents benefited (either personally (3%) or through someone in their household (4%) from employment opportunities related to the preparations for the 2012 Games.
For the 3% of respondents who personally secured employment:
40% noted that they needed to be trained in new skills;
78% were already in work, education or training;
22% were unemployed – 7% of whom were unemployed for more than six months and a further 8% who were unemployed for more than a year.
For the 4% of household members who secured employment:
38% needed to be trained in new skills;
81% were already in work, education or training;
12% were unemployed – 4% of whom were unemployed for more than a year.
(x)Green issues and sustainability
Prior to being asked the question, 29% of respondents were aware that the 2012 Games are aiming to be the greenest ever.
Of those respondents who knew about this aim, three-quarters (78%) said that the Games had not caused them to change their behaviors with regard to sustainability, with the 21% for whom it had prompted a change noting that it had prompted them to:
Increase recycling – 10%;
Protect their local environment – 10%;
Conserve water/reduce water wastage – 7%;
Improve environmental friendly transport behaviour – 7%;
Reduce energy consumption – 4%;
Change their attitudes to sustainability – 3%.
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