Long Beach, CA
File #: 21-0737    Version: 1 Name: CD9 - Studying Establishment of Public Pool in North Long Beach
Type: Agenda Item Status: Approved
File created: 7/26/2021 In control: City Council
On agenda: 8/3/2021 Final action: 8/3/2021
Title: Recommendation to direct City Manager and the Parks, Recreation, and Marine Department to explore the feasibility of, locations for, and funding options for the construction of a public pool to serve the North Long Beach community and return to council with a report within 120 days.
Sponsors: VICE MAYOR REX RICHARDSON, NINTH DISTRICT, COUNCILWOMAN MARY ZENDEJAS, FIRST DISTRICT, COUNCILWOMAN SUZIE A. PRICE, THIRD DISTRICT, COUNCILMAN AL AUSTIN, EIGHTH DISTRICT
Attachments: 1. 080321-R-20sr.pdf, 2. 080321-R-20 Corresp. Christensen.pdf
TITLE
Recommendation to direct City Manager and the Parks, Recreation, and Marine Department to explore the feasibility of, locations for, and funding options for the construction of a public pool to serve the North Long Beach community and return to council with a report within 120 days.

DISCUSSION
The 90805 zip code is largest zip code in the city, hope to 90,000 people, and home to more children than any other district in the city. Despite being the hottest council district by average temperature, Long Beach’s 9th District is unique among council districts in its lack of a year-round public pool within 4 miles of the district border.1 The city of Long Beach should evaluate closing this critical gap by evaluating the creation of the city’s fourth public pool, located in North Long Beach.

Council District Distance to Nearest Public Pool (in miles) |109|1.28 |109|1.99 |1099||109|3.06 |109|3.44 |1099||1099||109|2.07 |10 9|4.57

Public pools provide important exercise facilities, offer a space for social gathering, and allow year-round access to aquatic sports equipment for members of the community. The positive public health impacts of public pools are well established. In a 2003 study published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, researchers discovered that “use of [a] pool facility for social contact was directly linked to reports of relief of stress and isolation, and improved mental health,” and “[a] pool opening was associated with local area regeneration.”2 In the realm of physical health, the British Journal of Medicine reported in 2017 that swimmers faced a 41% lower risk of death due to heart disease and stroke compared to non-swimmers.3
Though the YMCA, Pools of Hope, and Jordan High School all have pools in the 9th District, the YMCA and Pools of Hope pools are not open to the public, and Jordan High School’s pool is only open in the summer, with limited capacity.
In a city where beachgoing is also a common recreational ...

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