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For $9k, you can sponsor Hill’s park wading pools this summer (+ help keep pools open everywhere)

How does Molly Moon Mondays at Cal Anderson Wading Pool roll off your tongue? Facing continued budget constraints, Seattle Parks is testing out a sponsorship program for its system of wading pools across the city. Last summer, the popular wade pools in Cal Anderson and Volunteer Park remained open while many other cool-down spots in other parts of Seattle were closed for the summer.


Details on the day sponsorships are below.

(Image: Jeanine Anderson via Flickr)

 

Seattle Parks and Recreation, which has had to make substantial cutbacks in the operations of its 25 wading pools because of budget reductions, is seeking partners interested in helping increase access to the pools during the eight-week 2011 summer season.

Cutbacks include the reduction from operating 25 wading pools six or seven days a week to operating five pools seven days a week, 10 three days a week, and closing 10. (Three are being converted to water spray features, which do not require staffing as wading pools do under state law.)

 Parks hopes to expand the schedule to increase family recreational opportunities in a way that is economically and geographically equitable. Some communities may be more organized or have different access to funding sources, so Parks would pair wading pools as a way to ensure balanced and equal recreational opportunities across our city. Under this partnership, Parks would keep the wading pool open one additional day each week in the neighborhood from which the funds came, and Parks would select a second site that the contribution would fund as well.

Opportunities include:

  • Sponsoring two wading pools one day per week through the summer at a cost of $8,800
  • Sponsoring two wading pools for three days per week during the last two weeks of summer at a cost of $6,600
  • Sponsoring a one day wading pool operation for a special event at a cost of $650
  • Receiving recognition on the Seattle Parks and Recreation website
  • Sponsoring an unfunded wading pool three days per week through the summer

For more information, or for organizations interested in a partnership with Parks and Recreation to provide more access to wading pools this summer, please contact Bill Dougherty, 206-684-7185, [email protected] or Kathy Whitman, 206-684-7099,[email protected], no later than May 1, 2011.

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kjer
kjer
13 years ago

the cap hill wading pool is a joke, it should be changed into a hipster bike polo arena.

Andrew Taylor
Andrew Taylor
13 years ago

(Three are being converted to water spray features, which do not require staffing as wading pools do under state law.)

Presumably the Ron Bills Fountain at Miller Park will still be with us this Summer.

areas of expertise
areas of expertise
13 years ago

wtf? are you a wading pool connoisseur? my little girl and many of her friends hold it in very high regard.

but wait…no, you are a troll. insulting something that capitol hill kids have enjoyed every summer since the days of the wpa (who built it) AND hipsters, all in the same sentence. dimwit.

Nan
Nan
13 years ago

I would hate to see any of them close. They are a unique Seattle tradition not seen in too many places anymore. Wish I could sponsor the one in Volunteer Park myself!

clew
clew
13 years ago

Pairing pools, or pocket parks, is a great idea — helps keep public space pleasant everywhere in the city.