What’s it like these days in
Sochi, the Black Sea resort about to host the Winter Olympics? That depends on
who you ask, or if you live there. Sochi is widely known as “Putin’s town,” and,
in the run-up to the Games, it has become a boomtown where gleaming residential
and office complexes dot a city filled with Stalin-Gothic architecture.
Construction in Sochi |
But for the average Sochi
resident the Games are largely an inconvenience – in danger of becoming a
disaster. Long power and water outages and colossal traffic jams have been caused
by Olympic construction. Some residents have been evicted, especially if their
homes were in the path of a planned venue. There have also been multiple violations
of labor law, along with widespread corruption in the course of Olympic construction,
including illegal permission for the building of large private homes and
shopping malls unrelated to the Games. And that doesn’t cover the
security threats or overkill response.
Yet this is not the first Olympic
community to be shortchanged, disrupted, and abused. Take the 1980 Winter
Games, which happened shortly after the US and USSR began their face off in
Afghanistan. In fact, the Lake Placid Games could easily have become a $150
million disaster movie. But like most of the media gathering in Sochi, ABC, the
network with the exclusive US rights to cover the 1980 Winter Olympics, ignored
much of the news unfolding outside the official sites. For example, the fact
that thousands of spectators missed events they paid premium prices to attend,
or were left out in the cold after the athletes were done.
On opening night, to keep from
freezing spectators and New York state troopers broke into the VIP lounge near
the luge run. The next morning then-Gov. Hugh Carey said that no one would be
prosecuted.
By the first weekend, amidst US
hopes that the US hockey team would prevail in a finals battle with the Soviets,
and that speed skater Eric Heiden might win as many as five gold medals,
Olympic officials were on the verge of banning more visitors – for their own
protection. “I don’t want to endanger people,” admitted Rev. Bernard Fell,
president of the Lake Placid Olympic Organizing Committee (LPOOC).
A tiny upstate New York community,
one that had fought hard for the right to host these Games, was instead hosting
a regional emergency. And it took even more unpleasant turns over the first few
days. Fights broke out over bus rides; to get on an “official” bus you needed
the right color ID. People fumed as half-empty vans left them at roadside. Attending
as a journalist I watched entire families hitchhike through the snow.
One crowd, catching sight of a
van downtown, was refused entry when they tried to board. Surrounding the
vehicle, they ended up rocking it angrily. After that a new order went out from
the top: drivers should not travel on Main Street in Lake Placid during midday.
In some accounts the sense was
conveyed that thousands were stranded on the streets, many on the verge of
severe frostbite. But only about ten frostbite cases were reported during Week
One, and a mere 4,000 people were kept waiting in the freezing cold at Mt. van
Hoevenberg after bobsled and luge events. Some accounts claimed it was 15,000. One
driver explained that the real problem was the LPOOC. “They had six years and
still couldn’t get it straight,” he said. “After one ski jump there were
thousands of people waiting. They sent three buses.”
Gov. Carey authorized a
Department of Transportation contract with Greyhound for added services just in
time. But then over 30 Canadian drivers expectedly walked off their jobs. They
just locked their buses and left. And if any remaining drivers needed some wiper
fluid, forget it. Not even local gas stations had any left after the first day
of bad weather.
Relations between bus drivers and
State Police deteriorated along with the transportation system. When 15
troopers asked to hitch a ride on an “official” van, approval was denied by the
LPOOC’s director of operations. With two hours drivers were being ticketed for
minor infractions. About 40 drivers got tickets over the next few days.
If the Winter Games were proving
nothing else they were confirming widespread suspicions that although the US
could certainly put a man on the moon, it had no idea how to run a mass transit
system.
1980 US Hockey Team |
By the second week war stories
about LPOOC incompetence had become a new fad – almost as popular as mixing
politics with sports. There was little hope that the US would attend the upcoming
Summer Games in Moscow. President Carter, who didn’t attend the opening
ceremonies in upstate New York, was taking a hard line on withdrawal of Soviet troops
from Afghanistan. But what about the 1984 Winter Games, scheduled for Sarajevo?
After Tito’s death there was no telling what political earthquakes might rock
Yugoslavia by then.
“Sarajevo is next.” So said a
button circulating in what Olympic officials took to calling the “competition
zone.” Maybe so, but “next” could mean anything from another boycott to World
War III.
A political subtext emerged in
the competition for medals: the US was the underdog, perhaps no longer number
one. In fact, the USSR and East Germany were establishing a dominance close to
devastating. In the first week each country won 16 medals. The only US wins at
that point were men’s and women’s speed skating, including three medals for
Heiden.
The Competition Zone was a new
concept, a temporary nation, and a virtual police state with its own hierarchy,
built to accommodate 1,400 athletes and up to 30,000 spectators a day, plus a
media crew of thousands more.
At the low end of the ladder were
the ticketholders, enthusiasts who paid $60 per event only to wait hours for a
bus. Next were the holders of temporary passes, people like bus drivers and
lower-level staff. Some of them had been told they could attend indoor events.
But once the Games began the offer was withdrawn.
Athletes had obvious status and
value. Yet many were nevertheless lodged in claustrophobic cubicles at the
Olympic Village. Their rooms were actually cells for a future youth prison; the
bars would be added once the Games were over. Saunas and other recreation
facilities would be ripped out. Sometimes even athletes were victims of the transportation
system. Take the Soviet team that missed an awards ceremony when they weren’t
picked up on time.
Even in the press contingent
there were levels of privilege. But most journalists and photographers did find
a comfortable home in the Press Center, a converted high school where free
drinks flowed and huge TV screens captured the action. Texas Instruments
produced summary printouts within minutes of every event. A reporter would have
to be blind and illiterate not to fill a newscast or column.
By midday the gym would fill up
with writers, who eventually went to work on typewriters provided by Olympia. Upper
levels classrooms housed various wire service offices, temporary corporate lounges
and Olympic administrative suites. Where were the students? At the Coca-Cola
Olympic School learning about metrics, sports medicine and athletic competition.
The 200 students displaced for the Games
also studied Olympic history and heard lectures from veterans of past competitions.
“It’s an ideal solution,” crowed
Project Coordinator Don Morrison, who normally ran the local elementary school.
“We don’t make it as rigidly formal as our regular classes.” That turned out to
be an understatement. Students mainly attended events and exhibits, while their
less-fortunate peers worked as part of the “Olympic family” in jobs ranging for
ticket-handling to food service.
No sacrifice seemed too great.
Residents of Lake Placid and surrounding towns had their lives seriously disrupted,
and saw staggering price hikes and traffic snarls in which a trip to the
grocery could take hours. Store owners initially expected to clean up during
the mass confusion by hiking their prices. But customers balked at the
systematic scalping and sales ended up being more modest than projected.
A new awareness gradually crept
into local consciousness. Residents began to feel they were really hostages in
their home towns, captives of the LPOOC, a new, un-elected and almost
criminally incompetent government.
When the planning for the 1980 Winter
Games began, organizers called it “the Olympics in perspective.” This was
supposed to be the time when the needs of athletes finally came first. But that
promise evaporated once the Games were politicized by the start of Cold War II.
When Secretary of State Cyrus Vance urged the International Olympic Committee
to move or cancel the Summer Games – only four days before the opening
ceremonies – sports lovers rightly began to fear that the competition itself
would ultimately be eclipsed. Subsequent events confirmed those fears.
In the end, the LPOOC could not even
deliver on its most basic pledge. The 1980 Games were not just out of
perspective, they were buried in an avalanche of corporate huckstering,
opportunistic politics, and logistical confusion. Should anything different be
expected in Sochi?
Greg Guma has been a writer,
editor, historian, activist and progressive manager for over four decades. His
latest book, Dons of Time, is a sci-fi look at the control of history as
power.
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