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Temple Cowley Pools plea receives tepid reception at Council meeting

adelayde | 24.01.2011 19:00 | Public sector cuts | Oxford

At this evening's Oxford City Council meeting the eloquent and impassioned speeches made to Councilors by members of the Save Temple Cowley Pools campaigned received a tepid response from councillors, especially those of the ruling labour party, responsabile for plans to close the pool and fitness centre.



As the Council meeting began at 5pm, the public gallery was packed with members of the campaign who were accompanied by a group who had been protesting outside the Town Hall against the UK's involvement in the repression and torture of Iraquis by the current Iraqui government.

After the Lord Mayor had gone through the various statutory procedures, there were then the Addresses by the Public to the council members. Gwynneth Pedler gave a coherent and effective plea to the council not to abolish the role of the disability access officer and highlighted the many achievements during the current officer's tenure that have improved the equality for disabled people within the City.

Following Gwynneth, Jane Magpie of Save Temple Cowley Pools took the stand and gave an impassioned speech on how the latest information that has come to light undermines the Council's case for closing the Pool. She notably highlighted several points of severe and direct criticism of the proposal and process as run by the Labour-led Council, and at the close received a rapturous applause from the public gallery and councillor's alike, with the notable exception of the Labour members.

Then Nigel Gibson took the stand and told the story that as the Campaign was uncertain of certain of the facts surrounding the proposed plans for the pool, that they'd made a Freedom of Information request from the council to obtain the full details of the project, including the breakdown of costs behind the £2.6 million pounds of critical repairs that the Council claims the pool needs.

Reading figures from the full costing for the refurbishment of Temple Cowley Pools and Fitness Centre, Nigel cited that of the £2.6m, 300,000 was actually earmarked for the new pool at Blackbird Leys. Of the £2.3m remaining, some £3,000 was for 'line painting', some £200,000 was for a new lighting system (this user of the pool finds the current lighting to be perfectly adequate), and only £30,000 was quoted as being the cost of repairing the supporting column in the main pool area that has been cited by the Council as being a main cause of the failing infrastructure of the pool and one of the primary reasons for closing it. So, in short:

The Council claims £2.6m to make the pool safe, when it actual fact it will cost just £30,000. The question is now, if the column in question is so unsafe, and threatening the structural integrity of the building, and it would only cost £30,000 to put it right, why hasn't the Council done anything about it. Presumably, Nigel concluded, because none of the Pool's users are actually at risk.

Nigel also highlighted that the Pool itself had a carbon footprint of just 37 tonnes of carbon per year, making it the most efficient facility in the City.

Nigel receive another round of applause and cheers from the public gallery, but a lukewarm reception from most of the Councilors, some of whom were now looking increasingly sheepish.

A finally Hillary Dewey took the stand to conclude the Addresses by the Public, and explained how the "greatest happiness for the greatest number of people" could be achieved by keeping the Pool open. She reminded Councilors that 11,000 people, or one in ten adults in Oxford, had signed the petition to save the pool, and that some 250,000 people used the pool every year. Including many people in the immediate vicinity who walked to the pool, and many more who cycled. Hillary concluded that the only reason she could see that might explain the Council's desire to sell-off the land the pool stands on was to provide more housing to Oxford Brookes University.

The Addresses by the Public over, Nigel then got to read a question to the Council Leader Bob Price asking why the council was willing to spend £16m on a project that would reduce the number of users of the facilities from the current approximately 450,000 users of Temple Cowley Pools and Fitness Centre and Blackbird Leys Swimming Pool to the estimated 350,000 users of the proposed Blackbird Leys Leisure Centre to which Councillor Price muttered a response that was too quite for me to hear*

* It seemed on several occasions that Councillor Price was unable or unwilling to use the microphones fitted in the chamber in order to make himself heard to his fellow Council Members, the Lord Mayor and those of us in the public gallery. If Cllr Price so wishes, we could arrange for a workshop on the correct use of a push button that enables a microphone to work.

adelayde

Additions

Thanks, and some figures...

25.01.2011 09:50


What can we say? Thanks for such a brilliant write-up! Please, please everyone have a look at our website, or email us for more information - this intransigent labour administration must be persuaded to change their mind.
It is unfortunate that we are limited by time when talking to the council - maximum of 5 minutes, and each time there is so much to say. It must be really difficult to follow what we are saying accurately, as we have to 'dump' what we have to say and hope some of it registers with the councillors.
So, a couple of clarifications on numbers around the Freedom of Information requests, which are exposing what misleading information has been used as propaganda to support the move to close two leisure facilities and replace them with one outside the ring road:

Maintenance costs: the council has said that £2.6m is needed to carry out back maintenance and avoid a 'catastrophic' failure at Temple Cowley Pools; our FOI request revealed that the council's figures were actually £2.3m for TCP, and £300,000 for the existing Blackbird Leys swimming pool. To fix the likely 'catastrophic' failure, one of six columns in the swimming area at TCP would be ONLY £30,000, nowhere near the £2.3m total.

Carbon emissions: Nigel produced a chart showing the relative energy efficiency of each leisure centre. The lower the number, the more energy efficient a building is. Since Fusion has taken over, they have reduced the carbon emissions due to electricity at TCP by a factor of four. The 37 figure was a measure on the scale, not the actual calculated CO2 tonnes equivalent, which is about 300 (down from 972 when the council ran it). Barton is 137, and Ferry 102. TCP is the most efficiently run leisure centre in Oxford and the council wants to shut it down - why?

We also pointed out that the usage at a new pool, using the council's forecasts, would be lower compared to current usage across the existing centres. Why is the council proposing to spend £16.5m on a facility, close two other centres, and end up with fewer people taking exercise?

We think we should be told - see our website, it's updated every day or so with latest information, and GET INVOLVED - the council will push through with this scheme, however barmy it seems, unless WE ALL persuade them otherwise.

Thanks again!

SaveTCP
mail e-mail: savetcp@gmail.com
- Homepage: http://savetemplecowleypools.webs.com