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Your Letters
 
Good to hear culture minister speaking-up over baths issue

• It is refreshing to read culture secretary Tessa Jowell’s views on the Kentish Town Swimming Bath speaking both as a mother and resident of the area (Tessa wades into pool row, February 2).

Too often we hear from politicians such nonsense that they appear to be from some other planet.
Take Cllr Phil Turner, for example. He keeps repeating like a mantra what he thinks residents want. For example, “21st-century facilities”, usually accompanied by “four stars” and “a state of the art leisure centre”.
What residents want are clean ordinary pools that would meet the needs of everyone at a reasonable cost.
The Kentish Town Swimming Baths should not require £17 million being thrown at it. Just keep the Grade II listed shell and build simple, effective pools within those walls.
These could be outside heated pools, or they could be protected in the winter by a bubble.
What we do not want or need, is what Swiss Cottage has turned out to be. Reduced pool facilities encased in some horrendous building, endless delays in opening and unaffordable costs for residents when they do eventually open.
Cllr Turner please listen to residents and stop telling them what they want. In case you are still in any doubt, ask one of Kentish Town’s most famous local residents. Tessa Jowell. She at least seems to have some idea what mothers in Camden really think or desire for their children
JEAN PAYNE
Elmore Street
N1


• Tessa Jowell is absolutely right when she says that what we need is local swimming pools for local children.
What we do NOT need is the council’s plan to replace the two main 30-metre pools at Kentish Town Sports Centre with a single 25-metre pool – cutting swimming space by more than half.
The pools are often full already through the first-rate range of activities they support – schools, the development squads for youngsters, groups such as women-only or the over-50s, and ordinary swimmers. What will happen to these activities if swimming space is cut by half? You can’t get a quart into a pint pot.
And this is on top of what the council have already done at Swiss Cottage swimming baths which will suffer a similar reduction in swimming space. when they finally reopen.
The Victorians created the Kentish Town swimming baths as an enduring legacy to succeeding generations. It’s pathetic if we can’t even maintain them at their present size.
Roderick Allison
Elaine Grove
NW3


• I agree with Carin Battle (Look to Leisure, February 2) that money made from parking permits and fines would be best used to maintain, refurbish or increase leisure facilities for residents.
Perhaps then we would not resent it so much next time we receive a parking penalty or have to fork out £90 for the privilege of parking on our street.
That would kill two birds with one stone as far as Labour is concerned. Find the money to save Kentish Town Swimming Baths and other facilities whilst winning the hearts and mind of those who bitterly resent the whole parking scheme and the money Camden makes from it.
How to get Councillor John Thane on board is another matter. Isn’t he the councillor who made it clear that swimming facilities on Hampstead Heath should be abolished altogether?
CAROLINE LOVELESS
Prospect Place
NW3


• Ronald Spencer Jones is wrong when he says membership fees recently advertised for the Swiss Cottage sports centre were in the vicinities of £175 and £350 (Swim shame, February 2).
In fact, things are much worst than that. The only membership on offer at the moment costs a whopping £539.40.
Individual swims are likely to set you back £3.30.
This would obviously discourage young people of modest means from using their brand new state-of-the-art facilities.
Camden’s Director of Leisure, Ian Nichols, has been bragging that the public should be thankful for the new Swiss Cottage Sports Centre. A centre which, incidentally, has caused five years of total disruption to swimming and sports activities, is not yet complete and promises much reduced swimming facilities when it does open.
So far, the centre appears to be catering for the gentry rather than the ordinary people of Kentish Town.
The high cost of yearly membership would seem to indicate that Mr Nichols had a certain public in mind when he made his comments about being thankful.
The rest of us need not apply, unless we are prepared to rob a small bank on the way to the ticket office. Camden has been feeding its residents mythology about the Swiss Cottage being refurbished to cater widely for the public, when all along they intended to involve private firms to take over and fleece the customers.
The Kentish Town Swimming Baths are next on the agenda.
One thing must be made clear to our councillors and Camden’s employees, including Mr Nichols. They are chosen to work for the community. Not the other way around.
They should get things right swiftly or be prepared to lose our votes, and their jobs.
DUNCAN MCMILLAN
Prince of Wales Road
NW5
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