New York City’s summer camp operators are bracing for another summer without swimming pool access, a cut partly caused by the cityโs ongoing lifeguard shortage.
The Young Judaea Sprout Brooklyn Day Camp in Red Hook used to be known for its swimming program, which was held at the neighborhood’s Olympic-sized city public pool located across the street. Before the pandemic, kids at the camp went swimming there every day, according to Alana Tilman, the programโs director.
But the city hasnโt granted swimming permits to summer camps since the summer of 2019 โ and this summer’s swim situation isnโt looking promising as city officials forecast more lifeguard staffing problems.
โOn a daily basis, camp parents come to pick up their kids and they see other people swimming in the Red Hook Pool,โ said Tilman. โAnd they don’t understand why we can’t do that.โ
Day camps canโt bring kids to swim without permits that grant a dedicated area for the campers in the pool. The city also requires that day camps applying for swimming permits hire additional private lifeguards and staff for supervision.
Because her campers couldnโt use the Red Hook Pool last summer, Tilman said her program paid $50,000 for access and transportation to a private pool in East Midwood. But the kids at the camp didnโt have the daily access to swimming offered in prior years, and the extra costs forced Tilman to scale back other activities. She plans to do the same this year.
Tilman said itโs โendlessly frustratingโ that her camp has been fully staffed every summer since the pandemic, โbut the parks department can’t get their act together.โ
โNew York City is only making the lifeguard crisis worse because there’s thousands of kids each summer who aren’t learning how to swim, who then aren’t going to be lifeguards in the future,โ Tilman said.
Parks department officials said last month they are on track to hire around 900 lifeguards for the season, which starts when the city’s…
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