On Tuesday 7th August, on a beautiful summer's day, Splashback
formally handed our community bid to the Council, to operate Leith
Waterworld.
We have spent a lot of time and hard work
on the bid over the last six months, and we believe we have got a
credible alternative - For clarity sake, we are not saying we would run
the pool FOR the Council, we are saying we would run the pool WITH the
Council. They are, after all (we hope) part of the community. We are
now handing over the 'baton' to the Council, and it's up to them whether
they run with it... whether they take the plunge... whether they make
the leap of faith... (etc!)
We believe that through
the investigation and research that we have undertaken, we have proved
that Leith Waterworld is a unique facility in the north of Edinburgh.
Our survey revealed that 74% of respondents (three-quarters!) reported
that they were swimming less as a family since the closure. Rather than
being a 'drain' omn public resources, in fact for an annual investment
less that the average subsidy to Scottish swimming pools, we believe we
can run this facility for the longer term benefit of the people of Leith
and Edinburgh.
Whilst the nation is basking in the
feelgood factor generated by this current generation's atheletes, Team
Splashback is looking to the future - and asking that we have the chance
to reopen Leith Waterworld as an investment in our children, our
community and our future.
The Council will meet on 4
September to discuss the bids they have received, and to consider the
future of the site. We will be publishing our bid, for the public to
read shortly, so that we can gather letters and messages of support to
take to the meeting. In the meantime, below is an article published in
the Scotsman last week, in respond to the bid going in...
Article from
The Scotsman
Gina Davidson: People power makes a splash
By GINA DAVIDSON
Published in The Scotsman, Thursday 9 August 2012
CAST your mind back to the
heady days of the council election campaign and the promises that were
being thrown around like so much wedding confetti by political parties
desperate to win your vote.
The big pledge they all seemed to sign up to
basically boiled down to becoming a more listening local authority, a
more communicative council, indeed a council which would run the city in
co-operation with its residents rather than handing down decisions
taken behind closed doors and then attempting to prevent
dissent.
Who
wouldn’t agree with that? Indeed, it could well be one of the
factors
that won Labour – the main insitgator of co-operation – just enough
votes to make it the largest group in the City Chambers, though not
quite big enough to go it alone.
And when we spoke before the
election, Labour leader Andrew Burns told me that his vision of a
“co-
operative Capital” meant there would be a radical change to the way
services were delivered, that the talents of people in communities
would be utlitised and that the council would “help facilitate what they
want to do”. Well right now there’s a perfect opportunity for proving
that these pledges were about more than just words.
Earlier this
week, the Splashback campaign group submitted proposals for the
community to take over the running of Leith Waterworld – the saga of the
closure of which has been told in much detail in the pages of this
paper over the last few years.
Edinbugh Leisure seemed unable to
make it financially viable (although the climbing centre at Ratho has
been kept going despite massive losses) and handed it back to the city
council to operate. It’s my understanding that the board of Edinburgh
Leisure didn’t think for a minute that the council would just close it.
But despite much local campaiging, that’s what happened and the last
splash was heard in January. However, people power –which seems to be
becoming a major force in Edinburgh, just look at the vocal strength of
the cycling lobby –was angrily moved into action. Now Splashback has
submitted a bid to the council outlining how it could take over the
running of Waterworld, how it would boost income by extending opening
hours and introducing soft play and more classes, and how it would
reduce operating costs.
The outline of its plans don’t seem to be
completely pie in the sky and it readily admits that a subsidy would
still have to be forthcoming from the council, although it would be much
smaller than is usually the case with such facilities.
Now there
will be those who suggest that no subsidy should be paid to keep places
like Waterworld going. That they should be able to pay their way, sink
or swim so to speak. But this a community resource, not a chain of
coffee shops or a private leisure club which relies on people forking
out hundreds of pounds for the privilege of saying they’re a member.
Precedents
have already been set. When the Crags Sports Centre was closed by
Edinburgh Leisure a new charity was formed between Boroughmuir Blaze
Basketball Club, basketballscotland and Castle Rock Edinvar Housing
Association to reopen the place. It’s now thriving – even running
holiday sports clubs for children this summer.
Similarly, the
Queensferry Recreation Centre, another victim of cuts, has been taken
over by the not-for-profit Queensferry Sports and Community Hub Company,
created by Queensferry Rugby Football Club.
These places are
still open because the people who used them valued them. It’s the same
with Leith Waterworld – even if the costs of running a swimming pool are
bound to be so much more than those of a gym hall.
And which
councillor, given the wave of enthusiasm there currently is for all
sporting endeavours thanks to the Olympics, would want to condemn an
area of the city to having fewer places to be active? To leave very
small children and the disabled, who find the warm waters of Waterworld
more conducive to swimming than those of more ordinary pools, without
the opportunity to go for a swim?
The newly refurbished Royal
Commonwealth Pool is a fantastic resource – the Team GB swimmers who
used it before the Olympics would testify to that. But that shouldn’t
mean other pools have to shut to accommodate the city having such a
first-class
facility.
Leith Waterworld is now Labour’s and Andrew
Burns’ first test on proving that they really believe in the co-op
ideal and that they are the way forward for this city. Here is a place
which the public wants open, which it’s prepared to run with just a
little financial help from the council. It’s time the council stepped up
to the podium and proved it’s got the will to see through its promises.