City of Calgary reopens select rinks and pools; community associations left with difficult decisions

The City of Calgary has announced it will reopen six sheets of ice at three arenas and four swimming pools in response to the government of Alberta’s eased COVID-19 restrictions.

On Saturday, the province made a surprise announcement that it would allow people 18 and under to take part in practices, lessons and conditioning activities again. The changes to the COVID-19 rules went into effect on Monday.

READ MORE: COVID-19: Kids back at practice as in-person dining and gyms open in Alberta on Monday

There can only be 10 people in a group, including coaches. Everyone must maintain physical distancing and masks must be worn except when engaging in the physical activity. No games are allowed.

The City of Calgary ice will be available at the Max Bell Centre, Father David Bauer and Norma Bush arenas and at the Southland Leisure Centre. The rinks will be available starting Thursday.

The four pools that will reopen on Monday, Feb. 22 are Bob Bahan, Canyon Meadows, Killarney and Sir Winston Churchill Aquatic and Recreations Centres.

The facilities can be booked for one-on-one training, league play or group exercise, but not for games.

Public skating, swimming and group fitness activities are part of later phases of the province’s phased plan to ease restrictions and are not permitted by the public health orders at this time.

Calgary Recreation is currently operating with only 10 per cent of its usual front-line staff. The city said re-staffing the four pools will take time before they can reopen. Not all community-run facilities will be reopening.

The Triwood Community Association arena remains closed and won’t be opening any time soon.

The executive director said his group assumed no sports would be allowed for a minimum of three weeks so they decided to take out the ice. Stephan Horbay said they won’t put it back in to accommodate “these wavering decisions.”

“It was quite a surprise. We were not expecting that and it’s caused some confusion,” said Leslie Evans, the executive director of the Federation of Calgary Communities, which represents 152 community associations in the city, about the province’s announcement on Saturday.

Read more:
Alberta government adds minor sports training, gymnastics and dance to Monday’s COVID-19 reopening

Evans said it may not make financial sense for community associations to open their buildings for groups of 10 at time, considering the associated costs.

“At the local level, everyone wants to open and they want to get back to doing business and they certainly want to support children mental and physical health, but there’s a cost to doing that and without guaranteed funding or some sort of ability to finance, that it might not make good business sense,” Evans said.

Evans said the community associations are in a difficult position now because it costs them money to open every time.

“Each community association in Calgary is run by an individual board who have been closed for almost a year. They have received no provincial operating dollars and generally speaking, they have received no operating dollars. It’s all based on the rentals and their program fees and services,” Evans said.

Read more:
COVID-19: What you can and cannot do in Alberta on Monday, Feb. 8

She said the city has stepped up with some emergency funding, which has helped but there are other factors like insurance costs.

“Other groups do have different insurers that actually have excluded COVID, meaning if a COVID outbreak happens at their community they have limited coverage. Therefore it’s a very big risk for the board to open,” Evans said.

“The extra sanitizing has to come out of the rental fees they can charge. And quite honestly, it may not make good business sense to open for one or two recreation groups that won’t pay market rent because they are down to eight participants and two instructors.”

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