Albuquerque Journal

Village has plumbing problems

Aussies among those complainin­g about toilets, electrical issues

- BY STEPHEN WADE AP SPORTS WRITER

RIO DE JANEIRO — Australian athletes will not move into their rooms at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics until serious plumbing, electrical and cleaning problems are fixed, with the troubled South American games opening in under two weeks.

Kitty Chiller, the head of the Australian delegation, said in a statement Sunday that team members “will not move into our allocated building” at the Athletes Village. She gave no hint of when they might. Teams from Britain and New Zealand were also reported to be having similar problems.

This comes as the sprawling 31-building village, which will house 18,000 athletes and officials at the height of the games, opened officially on Sunday with some athletes expected to arrive.

This is the latest problem for the troubled games, which have been hit by the Zika virus, security threats, water pollution, and severe budget cuts.

“We’re having plumbing problems, we’ve got leaking pipes,” Mike Tancred, the spokesman for the Australian team, said in an interview with AP. “We’ve got electrical problems. We’ve got cleaning problems. We’ve got lighting problems in some of the stairwells.”

He said more than 20 staff members have been unable to stay in the building, and said the first Australian athletes were to arrive Monday.

“We did a stress test on Saturday, turned on the taps and flushed the toilets, and water came flooding down the walls,” Tancred said.

Chiller listed the same problems, and added more.

“Water came down walls, there was a strong smell of gas in some apartments and there was ‘shorting’ in the electrical wiring,” she said. “We have been living in nearby hotels because the village is simply not safe or ready.”

She said teams from Britain and New Zealand had similar problems, which have been going on for at least a week.

Carlo Mornati, the Italian Olympic team leader, said that some areas of the village were still not ready and that his national Olympic committee, CONI, had been hiring workmen to carry out repairs for days.

“Among these unfinished areas are also a few apartments in block 20, the one to be used by Italy, and where manual workers, electricia­ns, plumbers and bricklayer­s — hired by CONI officials there as a matter of urgency — have been working over the past few days so that the athletes’ accommodat­ion can be brought up to normal conditions as soon as possible,” he in a statement Sunday.

The United States Olympic Committee acknowledg­ed there were small problems.

“As is the case with every games, we’re working with the local organizers to address minor issues and make sure the village is ready for Team USA athletes,” spokesman Patrick Sandusky told AP.

Britain said in a statement that it had found “some maintenanc­e difficulti­es.” It said many team members would be preparing in a training camp in the city of Belo Horizonte and would not immediatel­y need the village.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and local organizers held emergency talks Sunday and met with the heads of several teams.

In a statement, the IOC said athletes with unfinished rooms would “be placed in the best available accommodat­ion in other buildings.” It said fixing the problem “will take another few days.”

Rio organizers said despite the problems “a few hundred delegation members are moving in today as planned.”

Local reports said about 5 percent of the 3,600 apartments had gas, water and electrical faults, and some were without toilet fixtures.

 ?? LEO CORREA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The new residentia­l towers are where nearly 11,000 athletes and 6,000 coaches will stay during the upcoming Rio Olympics.
LEO CORREA/ASSOCIATED PRESS The new residentia­l towers are where nearly 11,000 athletes and 6,000 coaches will stay during the upcoming Rio Olympics.

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