Times Colonist

Communitie­s push healthier Halloween

- JENNIFER GRAHAM

REGINA — The gleeful “trick or treat” that children shout when they call at houses on Halloween is getting a healthier response in some cities across Canada.

Instead of candy, little ghosts and goblins on some doorsteps are getting passes to go swimming, skating and even skiing.

The eastern Ontario city of Cornwall started selling Halloween swim- and-skate passes in 2012.

Aquatic co-ordinator Lori Gibeau says the city started with 1,000 passes, but the program proved so popular that it now offers 1,500.

“And we have sold out every year that we have been doing this.”

The Halloween passes are sold in packs of 10 for $10. Each pass is good for a child or student admission to a leisure swim or public skate and is valid from Nov. 1 to Dec. 31.

Gibeau, who is a mom to two teenage girls, believes the passes are popular for several reasons, including that they encourage family bonding time and are a good price.

Normally, a one-time child fee for swimming is $3.92.

“It might give people an opportunit­y to get involved in some recreation activities that they might not necessaril­y have a chance to. It’s a healthy alternativ­e to the candy overload. You don’t have to worry about handing something out that may cause an allergic reaction,” she says.

“Some people … use them for the little, little ones where they don’t think that they necessaril­y need candy, so instead of giving a bag of chips out to a two-year-old, they might give this out instead.”

Melissa Coderre with Regina’s recreation department said the city used to give out passes to trick-or-treaters who went to recreation­al facilities on Halloween.

The program was expanded in 2014 so the public could buy passes and give them out for a “balanced Halloween experience.”

“It’s not just about [recreation] or it’s not just about candy. It’s about both,” she says. “And it also provides the community an allergy- conscious alternativ­e to give out to kids who can’t have candy.”

Teachers like passes for students, too, she adds.

In Regina, the passes for a public skate or swim are sold in packages of 10 for $5. They don’t expire.

They went on sale after Thanksgivi­ng, but people started calling to ask about them in August, Coderre says.

“We’ve sold out of our passes every year that we’ve done this program, and every year we’ve expanded the number of passes that we’ve sold by 5,000. The first year we printed 5,000 and this year we’re printing 20,000.

“Last year we sold out maybe within a week.”

Kids who get Halloween passes in Strathcona County, just outside Edmonton, can use them for swimming, skating and crosscount­ry skiing.

Jennifer Wilson with the county’s recreation services says the program started in 2013 after officials saw healthy Halloween programs in Calgary, Lethbridge, Alta., and Ottawa.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Children go trick-or-treating in Ottawa last Halloween. In lieu of just candy, more kids in more communitie­s could receive passes for swimming, skating or skiing this year.
JUSTIN TANG, THE CANADIAN PRESS Children go trick-or-treating in Ottawa last Halloween. In lieu of just candy, more kids in more communitie­s could receive passes for swimming, skating or skiing this year.

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