NYAC President's Message
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A Big Thank-You to the Province of Ontario

President's Message

April 2009


Natalie Lychy
NYAC President
 

Latest Development to Keep Our Pools Open

The province of Ontario has announced today (April 21st) that $12 million will be made available to keep the Toronto school pools open! See the Toronto Star article here.

Final "Save Our Pools" Rally

We are rallying NYAC to be at the TDSB Headquarters, 5050 Yonge Street at 6pm on Wednesday, April 22nd. Please show your NYAC spirit and come rally to keep our pools open.

Watch your email inbox for more information from your pool rep! Afternoon and evening practices are shortened and/or cancelled for Wednesday April 22nd.

Background

You have probably read articles in newspapers (Front Cover Toronto Star, Globe & Mail, April 17th, and again in Toronto Star, April 18th), or have heard bits on various other media sources of the rally and City Council Committee meeting at City Hall.

Murray Drudge, myself, Olga Macel and Marjie Chud were at City Hall on NYAC's behalf along with parents and "Raging Grandmas"! We delivered two deputations on NYAC's behalf. We have also made sure that your letters written have made it to the appropriate individuals. Despite the decision made by council, that is not to participate in talks with the TDSB and provincial government, as you read the attached document below, we cannot stop communicating to our elected officials how important it is to keep TDSB pools open. Please continue your efforts! NYAC will continue to work towards finding a solution to keep the TDSB pools open as well as continuing NYAC's programs in those TDSB pools.

A special thanks to Leon Goren, Marjie Chud, and Dave Douglas for all of their efforts to date working with David Crombie, Karen Pitre, Toronto Lands Corporation, the Aquatics Working Group and Let's Make Waves group. We really really appreciate all of your passion, time and efforts!

Sincerely,

Natalie Lychy
NYAC President


Latest From...
Let’s Make Waves

Let’s Make Waves, a non-partisan advocacy group, is having one last rally this Wednesday. If you cannot attend, then please consider the suggestions below. Write an email today and tomorrow. Pass it on.

Come and see how public advocacy can make a difference. This Wednesday, the Toronto District School Board (TDSB) Trustees will respond to David Crombie’s Report, Long Term Strategy for 39 Pools in the Toronto District School Board that was released in March 2009.

1. Rally this Wednesday, April 22nd at 6:PM, meeting at 7:PM. TDSB Offices at 5050 Yonge Street, north of Sheppard subway. Come for both rally and meeting, or just one. Bring the whole family! Swim attire is encouraged, along with signs, noisemakers, life jackets, swimming noodles. Last rally of this kind (we hope).

The pool issue is picking up momentum with the Press. We urge you to write to them, because a measure of what they report is the public outcry. You are especially urged to write to Toronto’s city newspapers. Read Royson James Op Ed from Saturday’s Star: http://www.thestar.com/article/620561

2. Write to the Editor at the Toronto Star lettertoed@thestar.ca and Toronto Sun torsun.editor@sunmedia.ca Tell them what you think and how you feel. Please do this today or tomorrow.

We were told last week at City Hall that the Community and Rec Committee will not participate in a discussion to keep the 39 community pools open. Consider the City is building a single pool in Regent Park for $12 million. Consider the City is spending $37 million to build a single aquatics center in Scarborough for the PanAm Games bid. Consider that to bring 39 pools scattered throughout the neighbourhoods in Metro it would cost $18 million over 5 years. (Consider that the City will have no civic representation at the PanAm Games because these are the pools used by swim club athletes to train.) What are their priorities?

3. Write to your City and tell them what you think and how you feel. Attached is a fact sheet that has been carefully checked. It was compiled through a variety of City originated sources.

Mayor Miller: mayor_miller@toronto.ca

Community and Rec Committee: councillor_davis@toronto.ca; councillor_ainslie@toronto.ca; councillor_augimeri@toronto.ca; councillor_jenkins@toronto.ca; j.mihevc@sympatico.ca; councillor_parker@toronto.ca (Only Jenkins and Parker voted in favor of the motion that was defeated on Thursday.)

The TDSB needs to be encouraged to do the right thing. Mr. Crombie’s report recommends that the TDSB expand the use of pools through increased aquatics programming as part of the curriculum. Many schools in Metro Toronto cannot accommodate its mandate for Health and Physical Education without a pool.

4. Write to your Trustee and tell them how you think they should respond to Mr. Crombie’s report. Find who they are and their email address here: http://www.tdsb.on.ca/boardroom/trustees

And finally…

If you feel so inclined, along with telling them how you think and feel, tell your elected officials how you will vote next election, if it discourages you that they are not listening to this public outcry.

Thank you once again for your efforts. Like you, we hope this is over soon.

Let’s Make Waves!

LET'S MAKE WAVES is a city-wide coalition of people working together to save our pools from closure. We are a non-partisan group. Visit us at www.letsmakewaves.ca



Previously From...

Let’s Make Waves

Dear Pool supporter,

What an incredible day. Several hundred enthusiastic folks came out to the front doors of City Hall at 9:00AM this morning, many donning swim wear and holding signs, to show they want their City Councilors to engage in the solution to help rescue the 39 community pools from closure this June.

Thank you rally-ers!! Lots of media captured your energy and positive spirit. The crowd was filled with students, and parents with young children, the “raging grannies”, special education groups, Masters swimmers, recreational swimmers, competitive swimmers, and lots of Toronto residents who just plain love splashing around in the water. Amazing effort!

At 9:30AM we went inside to give deputations before the Community and Recreation Committee. Normally a submission of 10 requests for a deputation on a topic is considered strong. We had over 70 people register with the City Administrator, because each of these individuals felt passionate enough to take time out of their work day, their personal schedule, and to make alternative daytime arrangements so that they may address this Committee.

Thank you deputants, both those who read before the Committee, and those who could not attend the full meeting from 10:00AM to 3:00PM and wait for their name to be called. The City residents we heard from had lots of points of view – some were young students, some were retired seniors, some stories made us laugh, some drowning stories caused us to cry, many views were academic, most were inspiring, and all were passionate. You care and you made a point to speak out about something you believe in. Thank you.

Deputants: Whether you were called upon or not, if you haven’t already, email your deputation to the City Administrator at cdavidov@toronto.ca and to each of the Committee members found here: http://www.toronto.ca/committees/community-development-recreation.htm

Did our effort make a difference? We were hoping that this Committee would consider supporting the following motion: Prepare a report on how the City of Toronto and the TDSB can work together to keep our community pools operational. We weren’t asking for capital or operating budget, or any new pools. We were simply asking for them to demonstrate the political will to work collaboratively with the TDSB to find a solution to keep these pools open.

Believe it or not, after 5 hours of passionate community deputations, and a discussion to clarify that the ask was not for budget but for the City to commit to working in partnership with the TDSB to resolve this 10-year old issue, the motion did not carry and was referred to staff.

The City has clearly sent a message that they are not willing to participate in this discussion to help find a solution to sustain the 39 community pools from closing.

What does this mean? It means that in the 10-year old staring contest between the Province, the City, and the TDSB, no one is blinking first. “It’s not my problem, talk to the other guy” is the similar refrain we’ve heard from each of the three parties. And so the 39 pools will close this June.

What can you do? You’ve done a lot to date. This group has presented its case directly to the TDSB, the Province, and now the City. As an advocacy group we have no ability to levy taxes or make decisions; we simply vote for people we believe will make the best decisions on our behalf.

If you are angry by this outcome, astounded by today’s decision that your City Councilors and your School Board Trustees will not meet to work together towards resolve on this issue, then all we have left to do is tell them how we feel. And also let your provincial polititians know how you feel. Remind them that you will remember their (in)action come election time. Pass on the request.

Your City Councillor: http://app.toronto.ca/im/council/councillors.jsp
Mayor’s Office: mayor_miller@toronto.ca
Your TDSB Trustee: http://www.tdsb.on.ca/boardroom/trustees/
Minister of Education: kwynne.mpp@liberal.ola.org
Minister of Infrastructure: gsmitherman.mpp@liberal.ola.org

You could also start writing and calling news media – newspapers, radio, tv, blogs. Write editorials, call in. If not for the sake of aquatics then to express your feedback about our dysfunctional political system at play.

And there is a TDSB meeting the evening of April 22
nd
and pools are on the agenda, likely for the last time. Information will be posted on their website.

Finally, as you write your emails about the City, consider:

In these 39 pools, 4,500 elementary students and 13,725 secondary students swim as part of their curriculum school day. If they didn’t swim in school, these youth may would have to sign up for lessons in City Parks and Rec. Except those programs are at over-capacity at they cannot get in.

In these 39 pools, 11,750 hours of permitted use are scheduled for the 2009-10 year that are outside of the school day. These programs will have no where to go in September 2009, so many will close.

When these pools close in June, aquatics resources for these 18,225 students, and another 11,750 hours of permitted use (many are for swim clubs, so there are dozens of swimmers for each hour) will have to be placed elsewhere. But the City has no room in its existing programming.

At the Committee meeting this morning, Councilors talked about how $22 million is needed to bring the City-owned 30 indoor and 60 outdoor pools into a state of good repair. This represents an average of $135K in capital costs per pool. Committee also talked about the cost of $12 million to build a single community pool in Regent Park. Clearly, it is more cost efficient to fix existing pool structures, than to build new ones.

Currently the City leases 33 TDSB pools to manage 45% of its Parks and Rec programming that cannot be sustained in the 30 indoor pools they own for 2.5 million residents. To meet existing demand levels the City needs more pools of its own, or needs a partner that has pools it can use. Currently the only partner in site is the TDSB, but there is unwillingness for these two parties to talk directly.

Of the 39 pools slated for closure in two months time, 31 are within old Metro, the City’s core. Closing them would further deplete neighbourhoods of easy access to swimming programs.

Yet this City Council has agreed to contribute $37.5 million aquatic facility in Scarborough for the 2015 PanAm Games bid. Ironically they will sit idle while the 39 neighbourhood pools close. These, ironically are the feeder pools where the athletes would train, so by not watching them close they are ensuring Toronto’s non-representation at the Games they could host.

Thank you everyone for your ongoing efforts and support. You are an amazing, encouraging, passionate group, and our diversity and humour keep us strong.

Let’s Make Waves

LET'S MAKE WAVES is a city-wide coalition of people working together to save our pools from closure. We are a non-partisan group. Visit us at www.letsmakewaves.ca




Ontario rescues city's pools
Apr 21, 2009 12:50 PM
The Province of Ontario decided to provide capital funding to keep pools open. McGuinty said today that the Ontario government will provide capital funding to keep the pools open at Toronto schools.

Closing pools won't wash on many levels
Royson James - Apr 21, 2009 04:30 AM
The quest to save swimming pools in 39 Toronto schools goes to the school board tomorrow. One should not assume that trustees will do the right thing and move heaven and earth to save the pools. A better approach would be to join the rally at the board headquarters, 5050 Yonge St., (North York Centre subway stop) to demand the city pools stay open.

Councillors tread water in pool crisis
Royson James - April 18, 2009
As the "Save our pools" chants rose outside Toronto city hall Thursday, one sign best summarized the issue that threatens to shame Toronto before the world: "Those who close school pools are fools," it read.

Crombie begs city to rescue 39 pools
Vanessa Lu - April 17, 2009
The tiny perfect mayor came to Toronto city hall to ask politicians to jump into the water.

$12M buoy not enough for pools

Kristin Rushowy - April 16, 2009
Even if the province throws the Toronto school board a $12-million life line to keep its pools afloat, it won't be enough to operate them, says chair John Campbell.

 

 

 





 
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