May 9 2013

Use of the Piedmont Pool by the Piedmont Unified School District students for physical education and sports activities has been allowed since the pool was built.  This past week, due to pool conflicts, the following announcement was sent to all Piedmont Middle School seventh graders and parents:

I’m sorry to inform you that our swimming unit planned for next week has been canceled.  After a month of careful planning, I was notified today that the Piedmont Community Pool is unable to accommodate our physical education program this year.  Please come to the locker room for our normal PE classes.

Mr. Lane, PE Instructor

The Recreation Department was unable to accommodate the seventh grade PMS PE (Physical Education) Swimming Unit this year.  Pool costs are carefully monitored as the City attempts to reduce the burden of taking over the pool management from the Piedmont Swim Club, that had assumed all expenses of running and maintaining the pool. A concern expressed after the management change was that the School District might not be able to continue the long standing practice of periodic pool usage for District athletics and PE.

City Recreation Director Mark Delventhal offered an apology to the Middle School for informing the PE department at the last minute that they could not use the pool.  He noted, “A PE swim unit in March [rather than May] is much more realistic for us.” He said “a much more robust swim program (masters/swim aerobics/tiny tot lessons) [had] use of the pool from essentially 8am to 3pm for a full week.”

 Delventhal wrote to the Middle School, “No two organizations have had a better, more cooperative and supportive relationship over the years than has PRD [Piedmont Recreation Department] and PMS [Piedmont Middle School].  Please be assured we have no intention of allowing that to change.   Period.”

For decades Piedmont Middle School has been the beneficiary of the Piedmont Recreation Department’s provision of after school sports programs.  The School District has saved significant costs through this arrangement, yet the programs offered by the Recreation Department charge student athletes to participate.  This is an atypical arrangement for a school district, but has allowed the programs to continue at no cost to the School District.

Apr 24 2013

Summer Season Starts May 1st-

Annual and Seasonal passes are available now at the Piedmont Community Pool office, 777 Magnolia Avenue. Annual Passes are valid for 365 days from the date of purchase, and seasonal passes are valid from May 1st through October 31, 2013.  Buying an annual resident or non-resident Family All Hours pass before May 1 could save $40 (the amount of the increases approved by the City Council).  The cost of annual passes for an Individual Adult or Individual Senior will not increase on May 1.

Complete price list and other details about passes are available on the Piedmont Community Pool web page.  For prices, click “fees & information” on the right side of the pool home page.  Download, fill out, and return the pass form to purchase or renew your pass.

Mar 16 2013

Hearing to Focus on Minors use of Lap Swimmer Lanes and Opening Hour of Pool – 

The Piedmont Recreation Commission will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, March 20, 2013 at 7:30pm in the City Council Chambers,  120 Vista Avenue.

The Commission will continue its discussion of two policy issues that were considered at the Commission meeting of January 30, 2013:

1. Opening hour of the pool on weekdays.

2. Access to designated lap swimming lanes by minors. > Click to read more…

Feb 23 2013

City Council Approves New Pool Fees –  

On February 19, the City Council approved by a 3-1 vote * the 2013-14 Piedmont Community Pool fees and schedules.  The weekend Youth (resident and non-resident alike) drop-in fee will be reduced from $7.50 to $7.00 .  Because Friday will no longer be considered a weekend day, Friday drop-in fees will be reduced for all walk-in swimmers.  (Resident adults will pay $10 instead of $15, non-resident adults will pay $20 instead of $30 and all youths will pay $5 instead of $7.50 Friday drop-in fee.)

While many day fees will be reduced, Family annual passes  for both residents and non-residents will increase $100 and family seasonal passes will increase $75 for both.  Piedmont seniors will pay $125 more, the greatest increase.   (Non-Piedmont seniors will pay a 30% increase for the same Seasonal Pass. )  Councilmember Keating advocated no increase in the Senior Seasonal Pass and either an increase in the Annual Passes or a reduction in the hours of the pool to reduce the General Fund subsidy required for pool operation.

> Click to read more…

Jan 29 2013

Recreation Commission Public Hearing – 

The Recreation Commission will hold a public hearing on proposed fees and schedules for the Piedmont Community Pool for the period of May 1, 2013 through April 30, 2014. The hearing is on Wednesday, January 30, at 7:30 pm, in City Council Chambers, City Hall. The Commissioners will hear a report on the operating shortfall for the pool for the current FY 12-13, necessitating an additional $19,294 appropriation from the General Fund.  The 12-month expenses for 2012-13 will be $650,00 and the revenues are expected to be $550,000.  The annual City subsidy is projected to be $100,000.  The fee schedule will be considered by the City Council at a future meeting.  Announcement of hearing and details. There will be no February meeting of the Recreation Commission.

Jan 24 2013

The Piedmont Recreation Commission will be considering Piedmont Community Pool budget, fees and schedules for the period May 1, 2013 through April 30, 2014 at a public hearing on Wednesday, January 30, at 7:30pm in the City Council Chambers, 120 Vista Avenue, Piedmont.

The meeting information  can be accessed here. For further information, contact Recreation Director Mark Delventhal at 420-3073.  The Recreation Commission meeting scheduled for Wednesday, February 20 has been canceled.
Aug 25 2012

Swim Team Tryouts Slots still available on August 29-

The Piedmont Swim Team (PST)  will kick off  its fall season on Tuesday, September 4.  All workouts will be at the Piedmont Community Pool. The team wants to add 20 new swimmers for a total of about 80 swimmers. There are still 15- minute slots open on the second day of tryouts on Wednesday, August 29, from 2:30 – 5pm. To schedule an evaluation on the 29th, email  piedmontswimteam@gmail.com. Please provide the name, gender, age and swim experience /abilities of your child. > Click to read more…

Jul 13 2012

City and Team Both in Transition Over Pool Use-

On Monday, July 16, the City Council will consider a new, six-months lease for the Piedmont Swim Team’s (PST) use of the city pool, increasing the team’s fee through December from $8,250 to $9000.  The one-year contract between the City and the team expired June 30, 2012.

According to Recreation Director Mark Delventhal, “The short-term extension is based upon both the Swim Team and the City being in a transition phase. The Swim Team is in the process of recruiting new coaches while the City, as we all know, continues in the process of assuming management of the pool and transitioning to a public facility.  Therefore, both parties agreed that a long term agreement at this time did not make sense.”

The team’s new schedule:

The City will also allow use of additional lanes in the main and medium pools when they are available.

Meanwhile, the team’s longtime coaching staff is leaving town at the end of the summer and planning to start a new swim team in Albany, which has a newly remodeled, 10-lane outdoor pool. Approximately 15 of the PST’s 105 members (most of whom live in Berkeley or Oakland) are expected to follow the coaches to Albany.

According to Leslie Pannell, president of the PST Board, “The team is practicing in Albany this summer, and it takes anywhere from 25 – 45 minutes to get there during commute hours, which is not acceptable for most Piedmont families.” She said that the overwhelming response from a survey of current team members “is that it’s important to have a team IN Piedmont that kids at all levels can walk to.”

The problem is providing enough of the pool’s six lanes for the team’s 2.5 hours of daily practice time. Since the City took over management of the pool a year ago, the team has been restricted to 3 lanes, resulting in multiple swimmers in one lane.  Pannell said because of this, “we are now looking to shrink the team to 80 members to maximize the swim experience of the kids on the Team and not have 8+  kids swimming in one lane at any given time.”

The City did offer the PST all 6 lanes for 2 hours, from 3 to 5 p.m., but the team turned it down. (This proposal included giving the High School team all 6 lanes from 5 to 7 p.m., and lap swimmers from 7 to 9 p.m. The latter also objected to this proposal.)

Pannell said “PST would like to work more closely with the Recreation Department to develop synergistic swim programs that meet both organizations’ revenue needs and objectives.”  She said PST originally planned to expand the team to the point where they could rent the entire pool during practice, but to do that, they would have to take less skilled swimmers, which she said, competes with the Rec Department’s plans to expand its own swim program. During contract discussions, Pannell said, “This growth was seen by the Rec staff as cannibalizing their plans to grow their lesson revenues by expanding it to more skill levels.”

If the PST reduces the team size, its revenue will shrink accordingly, limiting its ability to rent additional pool space.  Pannell said, “Our fee structure is competitive with the market, and although we plan to raise fees slightly for the Fall Quarter, we cannot significantly raise them without pricing ourselves out of the market. “

Pannell said PST historically had a good relationship with the Swim Club and for the most part, co-existed well.  “With the change to City management,” she said, “we have a good relationship with the Rec Department management, but the budget constraints that they are forced to work under has impacted the team’s access to the pool and has become increasingly restrictive.

“Without increased lane access, we are becoming a team that grows good competitive swimmers only to see them leave when their skills reach a level where they lap other swimmers in their workout lanes due to lane overcrowding, or they simply need to seek a larger competitive peer group to swim with.   Coaches wishing to develop and grow a team want to keep swimmers, not develop them for another program to profit from.   It is still too early to tell, in our Coach search, however we are concerned this will impact our ability to find a seasoned, good caliber head coach.”

It is Delventhal’s job to grapple with balancing the PST’s needs with those of lap swimmers and recreational (individual and family) swimmers —  who support the pool’s operations — as well as accommodate the Piedmont High School swim team and water polo team, which do not pay for use of the pool.   “We’re doing all we can to fashion a solution with the Swim Team,” Delventhal said. “There is talk of merging the Rec Department swim program and the PST. We are interested in that and want to work together, but not now.” He added, “We will have a Swim Team here, no matter who runs it.”

May 22 2012

More Pass Sales Expected to Boost Revenues –

The Piedmont Community Pool is not drowning in red ink and may even float on its own this fiscal year, but it may need  financial support during the next two years.  Recreation Director Mark Delventhal, joined by long-time Swim Club volunteer Jon Sakol, painted a good news/bad news picture of the pool’s operations at the City Council’s budget workshop on Saturday, May 19. > Click to read more…

Feb 29 2012

The Piedmont City Council will hold a hearing on the uses and charges for the Piedmont Community Pool on Monday, March 5, starting at 7:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers in City Hall.

> Click to read more…