UC to close swimming pool, community swim programs moving to YMCA

in #uc7 years ago

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Swimmers warm up for the annual City Meet swimming competition at the University of Charleston’s indoor pool. The pool will close its doors in August 2018.
Gazette-Mail file photo
The headquarters for youth swimming in Charleston will change addresses next summer, as its decades-long home will close its doors.

The University of Charleston recently announced that, due to planned renovations at the Gorman Athletic Facility, it will close the university’s indoor swimming pool. According to UC, because of the pool’s age, the university would need to make a significant investment for it to remain functional.

The university does not field a swim team, but it does have a roster of more than 500 student-athletes in various sports, so Charleston will re-purpose that space, with renovations beginning in August 2018.

With that, the community swim programs housed at UC’s pool will move to the YMCA of Kanawha Valley. Among those is the Huntington Y Charleston Aquatic Team (HYCAT), which holds the annual City Meet pitting club pools around the Kanawha Valley against each other.

As for the team, HYCAT executive director Greg Olson said the plan as of now — “It’s a fluid situation,” he said — was for HYCAT to move to the YMCA under a new name and operate under YMCA logistics and policies.

Name changes aren’t new to the organization, which started as the Greater Charleston Swimming Association, became SUN Aquatics in 1976, the University of Charleston Aquatic Team in 1992 and HYCAT in 2002. But the UC pool has been HYCAT’s home for more than 40 years.

“Change is always hard,” said Olson, who said he will not be making the move to the YMCA with HYCAT. “We just want to see the kids succeed. With our ‘Learn to Swim’ program that we started 42 years ago, we’ve taught probably 50,000 people how to swim.

“It’s really gratifying when you have a parent come to the program and say, ‘I learned to swim here and now my kids are learning to swim here,’” he added.

The City Meet will be held once more at the UC pool next summer, but the options for the event after that are numerous. YMCA youth development director Cindy Hemsworth said the age divisions and alignment will remain the same, but they’ve tossed around the idea of moving the City Meet outdoors, having pools bid to hold the meet or holding it at a pool the YMCA oversees, like at Coonskin Park or Pioneer Park in East Bank.

“We’re thinking outside the box about what we can do,” Hemsworth said. “Nothing is finalized. We’re just exercising a couple of options.”

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