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Edinburgh Live
Edinburgh Live
National
Stuart Sommerville

Plea to stop West Lothian swimming pool closures, as community call for inquiry

Community councils have called upon West Lothian Council to reject plans to close three local swimming pools.

The Joint Forum of Community Councils told councillors it was time for the local authority to “be the parent in the room”.

The Forum said £500,000 that West Lothian Leisure has asked for to pay redundancies should instead be invested in renewing leisure venues.

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It also called for an inquiry into the handling of the leisure facilities by West Lothian Leisure - and for the results of that inquiry to be made public.

The Executive - West Lothian Council’s decision making committee - has to decide on Tuesday whether to grant consent to West Lothian Leisure, the council’s arms length trust which operates leisure facilities - to close the pools in Armadale, Broxburn and Livingston by September.

In a statement released at the weekend the community councils said: “The community has risen up with swift petitions against closure, attracting thousands of supporters. But judging by the report to be taken by the Executive Committee on Tuesday which is reportedly set to approve the closures, their views count for nothing.

“We urge the Council Executive Committee to reject the request for consent for WLL closures and to work with the community to develop a better plan for leisure provision in West Lothian.”

The statement added: “The Joint Forum believes that West Lothian Leisure is the problem, and that its mismanagement of leisure facilities over many years has led to this situation.

“We call for an independent inquiry by public leisure experts into the management of leisure provision in West Lothian on behalf of the communities, with a remit to examine the council's role over the last five years and for the next ten years as the strategic parent in the room. ”

And the forum weighed into the council accusing it of doing nothing to save the pools.

While the council has granted temporary funding to maintain Howden Park beyond September, it has made no commitment to the pools.

In their statement the Forum said: “There were expressions of interest, some of them hastily knitted together by members of our communities that formed action groups. These citizens were suddenly having to think about forming companies, gathering community support for the idea of a local pool enterprise.

“They got no support or help from their council; they were even asked to sign a non-disclosure agreement. It was ‘let’s ask the community to take these pools on, but let’s set an impossible deadline and withhold Capacity Building support or even forbid it financial assistance’.

“One interview and then discarded as unviable.”

The Forum concludes: “The public of West Lothian deserves a much better leisure service, and we call for a clear strategy with investment plans for new pools and leisure centres to replace the ageing infrastructure. The findings of the inquiry should be made public, so that we can know if there is a future for leisure in West Lothian or if it is downhill all the way.”

The request for consent by West Lothian Leisure is the last item on a lengthy agenda for the Executive meetings. As with all discussions around the future of the venues it will be heard behind closed doors because of commercial confidentiality.

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