Toronto Star

Frustratin­g rec registrati­on system may finally be a thing of the past

We buy and book many things online, so why did it take the city so long to get with the program?

- Edward Keenan

This morning — a Wednesday morning — parents in Toronto are engaging in a time-honoured tradition, perhaps for the last time. At recreation centres across downtown, they are lining up in the morning darkness, standing vigil in the March cold. In living rooms from Riverdale to Parkdale, they are assembling every piece of communicat­ions technology in the house, refreshing browsers and speed redialling, with family ID numbers and program codes ready to deploy.

It is a forging ground, a test of patience, timing and resourcefu­lness that rewards the lucky few — those who succeed will enter their children into swimming lessons and get to brag that they made it, through their feats of will and determinat­ion and the grace of God. Those who dial too slowly, or oversleep, or forget their codes . . . well, let’s not discuss it.

It is a piece of Toronto’s heritage, this frustratin­g and convoluted registrati­on process run by the city’s Parks, Forestry and Recreation department. And for generation­s of parents it has been a shared bond of adversity. “Why can’t they fix this?” bleary-eyed parents have said to each other, clutching their hair in their hands as they stare at the tauntingly named “FUN” guide full of programs they failed to get into, just as their parents did before them.

And Tuesday, Mayor John Tory announced a plan to end that tradition, robbing future parents of the sense of accomplish­ment that comes with overcoming pointless obstacles and daunting challenges. He appointed a three-member panel to begin working on both short-term and long-term fixes for the registrati­on process. Mayor Tory says there will be an “entirely new system” in place by next year.

As long and bizarrely proud as the tradition of the seasonal frustratio­n festival has been, it’s safe to say very few people will miss it.

Like having to make your own candles, or using outhouses in the wintertime, there are some traditions of hardship that are easy to leave behind when technology makes them pointless.

The main question most will ask is, what took so long?

If you’re trying to book a hotel, you can go to a variety of websites and enter your preferred room size, approximat­e price and neighbourh­ood and immediatel­y all the options close to your preference­s, from multiple chains and independen­t hoteliers, will be presented to you. Click, click, and you’re booked.

If you try to buy something at Amazon, the website will immediatel­y recognize your account and show you other things you are likely to want.

Search for a book at the local library — in a library system run by the same government as rec programs! — and it will show you all holdings by the same author at every branch in the system and offer you the option of ordering them held or transferre­d for you right there.

No race to connect, at the precise second things become available, where a momentaril­y scrambled Wi-Fi connection means disaster. No cross referencin­g paper books and PDF printouts to look up options and alternativ­es one by one, for each potential location on a different page. No hassle.

Can this panel make booking recreation registrati­on as simple as booking a hotel or buying a book? It should be able to. And people will rightly celebrate if they do. Tory told me last fall — and repeated at his press conference Tuesday — that he hears about this more than virtually any other issue except transit.

“Fix that,” he told me they say, “and we’ll vote for you for life.”

Let us not celebrate yet. The panel is appointed, and the work has just begun. Even if they manage to build a great user interface for online registrati­on — and they should — there will still be shortages of space in some programs (though Siri Agrell of the mayor’s office says only 35 per cent of programs are full after the first hour of registrati­on, even if many parents unable to connect to the system have given up in frustratio­n before then). But a better system will make it easier and less frustratin­g to try to register, whether you get in or not, and will point clearly to where more or less programmin­g is needed, without trying to guess how registrati­on hassles are warping demand.

I suspect many parents, schooled by hard experience, will believe the changes when they see them.

But if you spent the morning trying to register, take those locks of hair you ripped out of your head in frustratio­n and put them in an album. You may be able to show them to your grandchild­ren as you tell them you were among the last to endure the hardships that have been our city’s recreation­al heritage. Edward Keenan writes on city issues ekeenan@thestar.ca. Follow: @thekeenanw­ire

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 ?? TORONTO STAR ?? A city panel should be able to make registrati­on for recreation as simple as booking a hotel — but let’s not celebrate yet, Edward Keenan writes.
TORONTO STAR A city panel should be able to make registrati­on for recreation as simple as booking a hotel — but let’s not celebrate yet, Edward Keenan writes.

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