Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Bid to ditch new centre ‘not feasible’

- By JOHN GREENWOOD john.greenwood@trinitymir­ror.com

A RADICAL proposal to axe plans to build a new leisure centre and swimming pool and instead refurbish the old buildings is a non starter, says a Cabinet member.

Leader of the opposition Conservati­ve group on Calderdale Council, Coun Steven Leigh (Ryburn) had urged the authority’s Cabinet to change tack on plans to build a new leisure centre with a swimming pool on the site of the existing one at North Bridge, Halifax.

Instead, and with a Government Levelling Up £12.2 million award for the project to take into account, Coun Leigh suggested the council should refurbish both the existing leisure centre and the nowclosed Halifax Swimming Pool.

Coun Leigh argued this would save the council the cost of a new building and reopening the old pool at Skircoat Road, Halifax, which the council has closed because it would cost too much to repair, would bring back into use a pool deep enough for some swimming groups to use.

The new plans have been controvers­ial with national champions Halifax Synchronis­ed Swimming Club leading a campaign to persuade the council to deepen the proposed new pool which they say could not be used by deep water swimmers as it stands.

But doing so would raise costs for the £24million centre by another £2million, councillor­s have been told.

Coun Leigh said terminolog­y in the Government award referenced refurbishm­ent of the swimming pool with some of the money needed to build a new centre having to be borrowed. “From the £12.2 million we might well be able to afford the services in both the leisure centre and the swimming baths. Shouldn’t we think about that?

“We could save the best part of £24million in extra borrowing and use the money that has come along to refurbish the two existing buildings,” he added.

But Cabinet member for Public Services and Communitie­s, Coun Jenny Lynn (Lab, Park) said the applicatio­n to the fund had set out what the money was going to be used for, in this case the new leisure centre.

“I think your suggestion that we re-purpose the grant we hope we are going to receive to refurbish the existing Halifax Pool, instead of doing what we told the Government we would do, which is put it towards the rising capital costs of our new leisure centre provision at North Bridge Leisure Centre, for all sorts of reasons we have gone into, that’s simply not going to be possible.

“It’s simply not feasible at this stage to go back to the drawing board in the way you are talking about,” she said.

Coun Leigh made his suggestion in debate while the council’s Cabinet was approving the council’s £138.9million capital programme for 2021-22 to 2023-24, after Coun Jane Scullion (Lab, Luddenden Foot) had spoken about challenges faced by councils up and down the country.

Earlier, in the public question time section of the Cabinet meeting, several members of the public urged Cabinet members to use the Levelling Up Fund money to deepen the proposed new pool.

 ?? ?? An artist’s impression of the new leisure centre at North Bridge, Halifax
An artist’s impression of the new leisure centre at North Bridge, Halifax

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