Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a town in NJ that was mostly white and there weren’t any community pools. First time I ever heard of such a thing was when I moved to VA. Nobody cared at all. Why would there be shared pools?
Where did people swim? Where did they learn to swim? Did the schools have swim teams? If so, did the swim teams "share the pool"? How does that work?
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a town in NJ that was mostly white and there weren’t any community pools. First time I ever heard of such a thing was when I moved to VA. Nobody cared at all. Why would there be shared pools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I had an extra public $ to invest, I would place it in housing subsidies for the elderly, low-income, homeless or maybe in food banks rather than in building a public pool or golf course.
That's not racism. It is a sober assessment of where public funds are most needed.
We should be doing housing, food banks, libraries, and public pools. The latter keeps kids off street, helps during heat waves, and teaches a valuable skill, swimming, that can help ward off tragic drowning incidents.
Anonymous wrote:If I had an extra public $ to invest, I would place it in housing subsidies for the elderly, low-income, homeless or maybe in food banks rather than in building a public pool or golf course.
That's not racism. It is a sober assessment of where public funds are most needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’re expensive to build, staff, and maintain. And even daily admission to the public pool is getting $$$ these days. I looked up the pool cost for a daily pass at the public pool in the suburb where I grew up in the Midwest and it’s up to $14/day, now you do get a free kids admission with an adult, so a parent and a kid could go for $14. And that’s only available during the week. Weekends are only for season pass holders and the cost is $215 for a family. Definitely not cheap if you’re on a lower income. Seniors do pay less.
+1 The other huge problem is liability. In today's world, too many parents/guardians/nannies/babysitters are looking at their cell phones and not keeping an eye on their kids.
Against a municipality? LOL, no.
Anonymous wrote:Given the recent heat way, I found this article shocking. The DMV seems a prime example of this trend.
"Yet just as public pools become more important than ever, they’re disappearing from sight.Pools have become harder to find for Americans who lack a pool in their backyard, can’t afford a country club, or don’t have a local YMCA. A legacy of segregation, the privatization of pools, and starved public recreation budgets have led to the decline of public places to swim in many cities.“If the public pool isn’t available and open, you don’t swim,” Sutton said."
https://www.cnn.com/2023/07/22/business/publi...reme-heat/index.html
This has been known (and goes back) for years. Just look at the NVSL (Northern Virginia Swim League). It is all private pools. Fairfax County has put in public rec centers with pools so there is that (and a few YMCAs). But in general there are not enough public recreation facilities (including parks and playing fields for sports).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Temperatures like this have happened on the planet before and even while our human ancestors were around. Global temperatures have only been tracked since about 1880. So not a long historical record.
This means you are anti science. Obviously.
No quite the contrary, fact is earth has been warmer and of course cooler. The earth’s climate is not static, so climate change is real. Is a warming trend occurring yes. Does the chart represent the highest temperatures since 1880, yes. Is it the highest temperature when modern man has been on earth, no.
Scientific fact, so accept it or live in your delusional world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Temperatures like this have happened on the planet before and even while our human ancestors were around. Global temperatures have only been tracked since about 1880. So not a long historical record.
This means you are anti science. Obviously.
Anonymous wrote:Here's an article for those of you who think this happened organically and in a race-neutral manner:
https://www.marketplace.org/2021/02/15/public-pools-used-to-be-everywhere-in-america-then-racism-shut-them-down/
"Public pools used to be everywhere in America. Then racism shut them down."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is really sad and is a obvious example of structural racism
It has nothing to do with structural racism. It has to do with the high cost of insurance and expenses to build and ROI. You wanted minimum wage: now multiply that across many lifeguards. Labor is always the most expensive component of any business.
Some gyms have dropped them because they kill their bottom line. Do you go to work to lose money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They’re expensive to build, staff, and maintain. And even daily admission to the public pool is getting $$$ these days. I looked up the pool cost for a daily pass at the public pool in the suburb where I grew up in the Midwest and it’s up to $14/day, now you do get a free kids admission with an adult, so a parent and a kid could go for $14. And that’s only available during the week. Weekends are only for season pass holders and the cost is $215 for a family. Definitely not cheap if you’re on a lower income. Seniors do pay less.
+1 The other huge problem is liability. In today's world, too many parents/guardians/nannies/babysitters are looking at their cell phones and not keeping an eye on their kids.