The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Meet the Hasselhoff of Philadelph­ia pools

Thelma Nesbitt trains and manages the city’s lifeguards.

- By Stephanie Farr

PHILADELPH­IA — Meet Thelma Nesbitt, a water safety instructor with Philadelph­ia’s Parks and Recreation Department by day and a nursing home nurse by night.

Moonlighti­ng poolside:

“Nursing is very stressful. My coworkers there are like, ‘You’re going to another job?’ and I’m like, ‘Oh yes, I’m going to de-stress, I’m going to jump in the water.”

On guarding the guards:

“First-year guards will say, ‘I had 10 saves!’ and I say, ‘What is wrong with this picture? Lifeguardi­ng is about prevention, so if you’re jumping in the water to save someone, what was you not doing?’ ”

Never too old to learn

When Thelma Nesbitt was injured in a car accident in 1988, her doctor suggested she take up swimming as part of her physical therapy.

But of all the activities Nesbitt learned growing up as a kid in West Philly, from ballet to ice skating, swimming was not among them.

So Nesbitt, then in her mid20s, went to the city’s Sayre Morris Recreation Center in West Philly, where water safety instructor­s at the pool taught her how to swim for free (a service the city still offers today).

“I had some really good instructor­s,” she said. “They told me, ‘You need to get into lifeguardi­ng.’ ”

Hesitant at first, Nesbitt took their advice and in 1990, she became a lifeguard at Sayre, the very pool where she’d learned to swim two years prior. In 1993, she was promoted to the position of water safety instructor at Carousel House in West Philly, then the city’s only recreation center for people with disabiliti­es.

Today, Nesbitt is the longest-tenured water safety instructor in Philadelph­ia’s Parks and Recreation Department, where, like David Hasselhoff in “Baywatch,” she trains and manages the city’s hundreds of lifeguards, according to Parks and Rec spokespers­on Maita Soukup. Nesbitt also teaches swim lessons and swim camps, inspects city pools, keeps staff hydrated, and steps up to stand guard in the tall white chair when staffing is short. She even fixes the occasional pair of goggles when called upon by young swimmers.

From 11 p.m. to 7 a.m., Nesbitt, 60, works as an overnight nurse at the rehab unit of local nursing home. She’s not sure where she gets her energy, but thinks it may have come from raising five kids, all of whom worked as lifeguards at city pools.

This year, Nesbitt’s 15-year-old grandson, Cameron Tilghman, took the lifeguard training course — the first of her 10 grandkids to do so. While he can’t lifeguard at a city pool until he’s 16, Tilghman wanted to prepare for next season. “It’s family tradition,” he said. Nesbitt, a no-nonsense woman who taught her kids how to swim in 12 feet of water when they were 3 years old, said the most important training she imparts to lifeguards involves CPR and spinal cord injuries, but also lessons about vigilance and taking charge in tough situations.

“I tell them everybody responds to emergencie­s differentl­y. There’s the flight mode and fight mode, and you never know which one you’re going to be until you’re in it,” she said. “But if you come across that situation, I want you to be comfortabl­e and prepared, even if you have to get your little sister’s teddy bear and practice CPR on it.”

This season, Nesbitt and the city’s five other water safety instructor­s trained 224 lifeguards, ranging in age from 16 to 71.

“You’re never too old to learn, or to become a lifeguard,” she said.

But amid a nationwide shortage of lifeguards due to COVID-19, the city fell well short of recruiting the more than 400 lifeguards needed to operate all 69 of its pools. As a result, only 47 pools were opened in Philly this year.

“It made it difficult for the citizens of Philadelph­ia,” Nesbitt said. “Where we had access to so many pools in the neighborho­od, now these children would have to walk further to get to a pool to cool down ... and you have to think about if they’re safe going into another area of the city.”

Nesbitt also worries about the people she used to work with at Carousel House. The city announced the closure of its only recreation center for people with disabiliti­es this year, which resulted in a public outcry and protest, but officials promised a new rec center being built on the site will include many of the same programs. Nesbitt said it was at Carousel’s pool, which was heated and had a hydraulic lift, where she saw the transforma­tive power water can have.

“Certain people would come through Carousel House who were losing their ability to walk, but when they got in the water and put a life jacket on, they were able to walk around in the world again,” she said. “It was really rewarding.”

 ?? ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Thelma Nesbitt, 60, says the most important training she imparts to lifeguards involves CPR and spinal cord injuries, but also lessons about vigilance and taking charge in tough situations. “I tell them everybody responds to emergencie­s differentl­y.”
ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Thelma Nesbitt, 60, says the most important training she imparts to lifeguards involves CPR and spinal cord injuries, but also lessons about vigilance and taking charge in tough situations. “I tell them everybody responds to emergencie­s differentl­y.”

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