New York Daily News

BIG HIT TO CITY SWIM PROGRAMS

Lifeguard shortage means fewer lessons; officials fear increase in tragedies, especially among Blacks

- BY JOSEPHINE STRATMAN

The shutdown of NYC public swim programs due to a lifeguard shortage is threatenin­g to reduce access for families who don’t have access to private lessons — and worsen longstandi­ng disparitie­s in swimming ability and water safety.

Patrice Bryson, 41, of Hamilton Heights, had wanted her 13-yearold daughter to learn to swim for a while, so that she’d be safer on outings to pools and beaches, and thought this summer was time to take the plunge. But when Bryson looked online to register her, she saw the programs had been canceled.

“I’ve always wanted her to learn how to swim. So now I have to struggle to find another alternativ­e for her to do,” Bryson said. “It’s hard when you’re a parent that really has a budget to try to keep their kids occupied.”

The lifeguard shortage has been disrupting swim programmin­g for the city’s 53 outdoor public pools since the pandemic began. The Parks Department’s ability to hire and train enough lifeguards has stalled, according to the department. It has hired just 529 of 1,500 lifeguards needed as of Tuesday, according to Meghan Lalor, Parks Department spokeswoma­n.

The shortage, in part fueled by lack of training opportunit­ies during the pandemic, has forced the department to cut back on programmin­g, which includes learnto-swim and lap-swim programs that, in total, usually serve about 20,000 children every summer.

“We are disappoint­ed not to be able to offer swimming lessons this summer, but ultimately we have to move forward with the safest and most equitable option, providing open swim to all,” Lalor said. “We look forward to once again providing indoor learn-to-swim lessons this fall, as we did last year.”

The impact of those cutbacks isn’t just about not having access to water in the summer. It could slow efforts to prevent drowning deaths among children of color.

While the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports drowning death rates have dropped — by 32% in the past decade — enduring racial disparitie­s in drowning deaths have not. Black Americans are 1.5 times more likely to drown than white Americans, according to a 2021 report.

The disparity is starker for youngsters: Black children drown about three times more than white children, according to the CDC.

“I think that we’re going to see real progress get halted or maybe even start to go backward as kids just don’t have access to those lessons in that formal setting,” Jennifer Pharr, associate professor at the University of Nevada Las Vegas, said.

“My concern, being a public health professor, is that we’re going to see drowning incidents start to go up again . ... It’s heartbreak­ing, because it’s preventabl­e . ... It just seems like this is really going to further disadvanta­ge kids who are already disadvanta­ged because of either income or race and ethnicity.”

Research by the USA Swimming Foundation showed swimming ability among children improved from 2010 to 2017 — but researcher­s say that the reduced pool availabili­ty and canceled lessons may threaten that progress.

In 2010, research by the foundation found that 69% of Black children, 58% of Latino children and 42% of white children said they had little to no swimming ability. Those numbers have slowly improved in the last decade: In 2017, 64% of Black children, 45% of Latino children and 40% of white children said they had little to no swimming ability.

This isn’t just an inequity issue; it’s an issue of public safety, said Shawn Slevin, founder and executive director of the Swim Strong Foundation, which teaches New Yorkers water safety education and swimming skills.

Several recent drownings in the area, including two recent drownings in the Rockaways and the drowning of two 13-year-old boys in Jamaica Bay earlier this month, show the grave risks of swimming disparitie­s, according to Slevin. The three victims who have been

identified in those incidents are children of color.

“It’s time to do something differentl­y, to address the elephant in the room,” Slevin said. We just can’t keep doing the same things over and over again and expect a different outcome”

The city’s canceled programmin­g has also already started to overflow other organizati­ons.

Plus Pool, a nonprofit that partners with the New York City Housing Authority to teach kids to swim, has started to see the ripple effects of the canceled programs. The nonprofit had to close registrati­on early after a sharp influx of interest.

“We’re trying to really offer opportunit­ies to kids who otherwise wouldn’t have the opportunit­y to learn and it was always some of the city’s holes that we were filling before, but now I think there’s such a huge gap,” Kara Meyer, managing director of Plus Pool, said.

The city’s pools also help thousands stay cool in the summer, said Adam Ganser, executive director of New Yorkers for Parks.

“It was really, really detrimenta­l to the public health of the city’s residents, particular­ly those lower on the socioecono­mic ladder that don’t have air conditioni­ng in their homes or apartments,” he said.

Gov. Hochul announced last week a pay raise for state lifeguards at state-operated swimming facilities in an attempt to resolve the shortage, but the city has not yet taken action.

Swimmer Esneider Huasipungo, 54, has been a near-lifelong frequenter of the city’s public pools. He loves the sport as a low-impact way to stay healthy, and used to swim several days a week at Flushing Meadows Aquatic Center, an indoor pool in Queens now closed indefinite­ly for repairs. Since the pool’s closure and limited hours elsewhere, he’s had to scramble to find other options, sometimes trekking an hour and 20 minutes to fit in just an hour of swim time.

“I think it’s one of the best things we have in New York City,” Huasipungo, who works as a culinary tour guide, said.

“I mean, we have public libraries, we have the parks, we have the pools . ... But all of a sudden, it’s just this constant struggle, looking at pool schedules, looking at my work schedule, trying to figure out how to do it. And I’m really adamant about doing it because I want to keep my physical health, especially postpandem­ic where being in good health has come to the forefront.”

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 ?? ?? People enjoy a hot afternoon at the Astoria Pool in Queens in 2018.
People enjoy a hot afternoon at the Astoria Pool in Queens in 2018.

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