Share

Olympics organisers remove charity auction posters

Olympics organisers remove charity auction posters
News

Olympics organisers remove charity auction posters

Fundraising | Kirsty Weakley | 2 Aug 2012

Olympic organisers yesterday removed posters from around the outside of the Olympic Park, including one advertising a charity auction.

Furniture designer Martin Barnett provided £150,000 worth of furniture to a pop-up restaurant, Forman’s Fish Island, for the duration of the Games and plans to sell it afterwards with 20 per cent of the proceeds going to charity.

Barnett said: “They are being very aggressive and we are not even in the park.”

He added: “We are doing our bit and we have gone and put the signs up so people are aware – if you want to buy a chair or something you can buy it here and some of the money will go to charity.”

London mayor Boris Johnson branded the action “outrageous” when he was asked about it on LBC Radio, and said: “I will immediately get on it.”

This morning a spokesman for the Olympic Delivery Authority, which was responsible, said: “A number of posters attached to lamp-posts near the Olympic Park were removed earlier today because they contravened advertising and trading regulations during the Olympic Games. However, we have decided that it would not be appropriate to take any further action over posters or signs that are purely intended to direct people to local business premises or attractions – as opposed to being for advertising purposes.”

No live-streaming in the office

Meanwhile the Telegraph has reported that Mencap is among a growing number of organisations that have asked staff not to live-stream the Olympics on their computers as it uses up bandwidth and affects the speed of the internet connection.

It has however set up a large screen in the canteen so that people can watch the action.

Other organisations including, Los Angeles city council, marketing company Forward 3D and Olympic sponsor Deloitte have taken similar measures.

The BBC Sport website has recorded high volumes of traffic this week, with 9.7 million global unique visitors on Monday.

Comments

[Cancel] | Reply to:

Close »

Community Standards

The civilsociety.co.uk community and comments board is intended as a platform for informed and civilised debate.

We hope to encourage a broad range of views, however, there are standards that we expect commentators to uphold. We reserve the right to delete or amend any comments that do not adhere to these standards.

We welcome:

  • Robust but respectful debate
  • Strongly held opinions
  • Intelligent relevant discussion
  • The sharing of relevant experiences
  • New participants

We will not publish:

  • Rude, threatening, offensive, obscene or abusive language, or links to such material
  • Links to commercial organisations or spam postings. The comments board is not an advertising platform
  • The posting of contact details for yourself or others
  • Comments intended for malicious purpose or mindless abuse
  • Comments purporting to be from another person or organisation under false pretences
  • Gratuitous criticism, commentary or self-promotion
  • Any material which breaches copyright or privacy laws, or could be considered libellous
  • The use of the comments board for the pursuit or extension of personal disputes

Be aware:

  • Views expressed on the comments board are left at users’ discretion and are in no way views held or supported by Civil Society Media
  • Comments left by others may not be accurate, do not rely on them as fact
  • You may be misunderstood - sarcasm and humour can easily be taken out of context, try to be clear

Please:

  • Enjoy the opportunity to express your opinion and respect the right of others to express theirs
  • Confine your remarks to issues rather than personalities

Together we can keep our community a polite, respectful and intelligent platform for discussion.

Free eNews

Shadow minister: Big Society Network is coalition’s ‘favourite charity’

18 Jun 2013

The £500,000 allocated by the Cabinet Office to Big Society Network and Society Network Foundation since...

NCVO to look at ways of improving national media coverage of sector

18 Jun 2013

The National Council for Voluntary Organisations has commissioned a report to find ways to encourage the...

Cancer Research UK launches new savings bond

17 Jun 2013

Cancer Research UK has launched a savings bond in partnership with the Coventry Building Society.

BIG announces £19m in community grants

18 Jun 2013

The Big Lottery Fund has announced 72 projects that have been allocated a share of £19m from its Reaching...

Fundraising self-regulation review announced

18 Jun 2013

The three fundraising regulatory bodies – the Institute of Fundraising, PFRA and Fundraising Standards...

Mayor of London confirms summer post-Olympics event

17 Jun 2013

Mayor of London Boris Johnson has today confirmed that London will host an event on 19 July to celebrate...

Commission to release data sets on charities' spending

17 Jun 2013

The Charity Commission data sets on how charities spend their money will be made publicly available in...

Your picks of the week

17 Jun 2013

Your CivilSociety rounds-up the most read stories from the previous week.

African education charity wins Overall Award at Charity Awards 2013

14 Jun 2013

A charity that has built 22 secondary schools in Uganda and Zambia and educated over 8,000 youngsters...

Join the discussion

Twitter
 
Training

Attending our one day courses is a highly effective way of ensuring new and existing trustees fully understand their role, responsibilities and liabilities.

>> Find out more <<