South Wales Evening Post

Cash support for leisure services hit by pandemic

- SARAH HUGHES Print Content Editor sarah.hughes@reachplc.com

SWANSEA Council is set to extend the pandemic support it gives to key partner organisati­ons that help deliver leisure services to people across the area.

A meeting of the council’s cabinet on November 17 is to be asked to agree new financial backing for the bodies that run operations such as the LC, leisure centres and the Wales National Pool.

Cabinet member Robert Francisdav­ies said: “The impact of Covid-19 continues; we want our leisure partnershi­ps to be sustainabl­e so it’s important that we support them.

“The past two years have been challengin­g. However, all partners have performed well, managed costs to keep them as low as possible, have made staff and customer safety a priority and have ensured that all government guidance has been followed.

“The aim for the next year is for all partners is to return to pre-covid-19 trading positions. We’ll continue to support them and monitor recovery.”

Ongoing challenges leading to lower revenues include changes of habit amongst the public, more people working from home, increased staff costs and new recruitmen­t challenges.

Guidance from the Welsh Local Government Associatio­n and the leisure industry during Covid was that financial assistance from local authoritie­s would be critical.

Much of the council’s support so far has been funded by the Welsh Government. New backing now proposed - up to £1m for the period up to March 2023 would be sourced from a previously agreed Covid support budget at the council.

The LC and the community leisure centres are council-owned facilities used by thousands of people every week. They are run by not-for-profit trust Freedom Leisure. The council has supported the trust’s local operations since the lockdowns began as the facilities were obliged to close temporaril­y then reopen in phases.

The Wales National Pool is jointly funded by the council and Swansea University.

Cllr Francis-davies said: “New funding will provide our partners with the greatest chance of fully recovering and will reduce the future financial impact on the council longer term.

“Losing or significan­tly reducing such services could have a significan­t impact on the groups of the communitie­s they serve.”

 ?? GAYLE MARSH ?? Swansea’s LC and other leisure services were hit hard during the pandemic as people stayed away
GAYLE MARSH Swansea’s LC and other leisure services were hit hard during the pandemic as people stayed away

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