logo
Midlothian Council to charge personal trainers and swimming instructors

Midlothian Council to charge personal trainers and swimming instructors

Edinburgh Reporter16 hours ago

Personal trainers and swimming instructors will have to pay hundreds of pounds a month to teach out of Midlothian Council sports centres from next month.
Growing demand for gym use has led to the local authority looking into charging people offering private training sessions £450 a month to use their facilities.
And swimming instructors who currently pay just a £5 adult entry to provide one on one lessons in the council's pools will now have to pay a £224 monthly charge.
The new fees were agreed at a meeting of Midlothian councillors this week after they were told membership subscriptions for the council's Tonezone programme was at its highest ever number with 5,349 members at the end of March this year.
Pay as you go gym lessons and attendance at swimming have also risen sharply in the last year with a rise of more than 11% in numbers for both leisure activities.
A report by officers said: 'Since the COVID-19 pandemic, demand for personal trainers has surged significantly. In Midlothian, this growing demand has led to several personal training gyms opening in recent years, with GRN Box
and Fitness Education Academy being notable examples.
'Competition has also intensified following the pandemic, with national chains like The Gym Group and David Lloyd expanding into Midlothian, both offering personal training services. Midlothian Council's Sport and Leisure Service does not currently offer personal training as a service.'
It added: 'It is proposed that external personal trainers pay a £450 monthly fee for access to our gym facilities to conduct personal training sessions with their clients.
'If personal trainers charge £55 per session (based on average of lowest and highest benchmarked). five sessions per week would equate to £275 per week, equating to £1100 per month gross income.'
On plans to charge swimming instructors the report notes that the council provides free swimming lessons for all primary four pupils and group sessions but it adds: 'There are currently seven external swimming instructors who deliver private lessons and also carry out an instructor role with sport and leisure.
'Instructors charge their clients between £10 to £20 per lesson. Currently, instructors are only required to pay for a standard Adult (£5.00) swim charge. Clients also pay for a standard swim on top of their lesson charge.'
The proposals were approved by council without debate.
By Marie Sharp Local Democracy Reporter
Like this:
Like

Related

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wonderland shop could become restaurant amid move
Wonderland shop could become restaurant amid move

Edinburgh Reporter

time35 minutes ago

  • Edinburgh Reporter

Wonderland shop could become restaurant amid move

The owners of Edinburgh model shop Wonderland Models have lodged plans to turn the Lothian Road shop into new restaurants. But the business which has been one of Scotland's leading model shops for more than 50 years will not be closing – simply changing location. As part of the shop's future planning, the team behind the store are investigating the option of converting the properties in their current location into restaurants, with the model shop business potentially relocating elsewhere. Wonderland Models has operated out of 97-103 Lothian Road for decades, serving generations of capital residents with a selection of niche toys, crafts, and models. Documents have been submitted to Edinburgh Council for a potential change of use, transforming the shop into two separate restaurants with new signage, replacing the classic Wonderland storefront. The interior, currently outfitted with shop rooms, would be refitted to include kitchens, dining rooms, food preparation areas, and restrooms. Wonderland Models has been one of Scotland's leading model shops for 53 years. The shop has a global reputation as a model-making emporium for enthusiasts and is a signature part of the Edinburgh retail landscape. Managing Director Iain Reid said: 'For over 50 years, our bespoke range of paints to modelling kits have captured the minds of families. Not a day goes by when we do not see parents bringing their children in for the first time, just as their mums and dads did with them. 'Wonderland Models has been established as one of Scotland's leading model shops for over 50 years, and as part of our future planning, we are investigating the option of turning the properties in our current location into restaurants with the model shop business potentially relocating elsewhere. We are currently exploring several options as part of this process. 'Lothian Road has changed beyond recognition since we started here back in the 1980s with many retail shops closing to be replaced by food and beverage outlets and the number of office workers (many now working just 3 days per week in the office) in the area similarly declining since the Covid pandemic. This has resulted in a substantial decline in foot traffic. 'It is critical to note to our loyal customers this is an exploratory move. It's business as usual for us and will remain that way for the foreseeable future. If a change does come, you can rest assured we will still be a fixture in the capital. 'Wonderland Models remains utterly committed to our customers. We're a unique shop in the Edinburgh retail landscape, and we are enormously grateful to our customers who have given us their business, love, and loyalty for over half a century.' Like this: Like Related

Dodds & Mouat return to Winter Olympics with gold on the mind
Dodds & Mouat return to Winter Olympics with gold on the mind

The Herald Scotland

time3 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Dodds & Mouat return to Winter Olympics with gold on the mind

The duo are eager to improve on their agonising fourth place finish in the mixed event in Beijing three years ago, while Mouat's men's team, who took silver in the Chinese capital, will go to Italy as defending world champions. Bruce Mouat and Jennifer Dodds will target curling glory in the curling mixed doubles event (Andrew Milligan/PA) 'It's our second time round and we've got a lot more experience than last time, so we're hoping to use that to get a little bit further,' said Mouat, whose team once again comprises Grant Hardie, Bobby Lammie and Hammy McMillan, along with alternate Kyle Waddell. 'We've been trying to figure out the extra one or two per cent we need to do better and it came down to sports psychology and nutrition. We really focused on these things to try and get better. 'Even six months after the Olympics we were looking at these things and they helped us win our first world title. Now we've established ourselves as one of the best teams in the world, so we're obviously doing a lot of things right.' Dodds joined a new team led by Olympic debutant Rebecca Morrison following the break-up of Eve Muirhead's team in the wake of their gold medal win. Now retired, Muirhead will be in Milan in a different capacity, as Team GB's Chef de Mission. Bruce Mouat's men's curling team will look to improve on their silver medal in Beijing (Andrew Milligan/PA) Morrison's team – also including Dodds, Sophie Jackson, Sophie Sinclair, and alternate Fay Henderson, qualified by virtue of a sixth-placed finish at this year's World Championship and will go to Milan as a curious blend of underdogs and defending champions. 'Obviously we're going to have a target on our backs as the defending champions, but we've played all these teams before and we're not worried about what they're thinking,' said Dodds. 'Every game at the Olympics is tough, no matter whether you've come out as the last chance qualifiers or you've won the last world title.' For Dodds, who will again team with Mouat in search of that elusive mixed doubles medal before switching her focus to the first women's team not to feature Muirhead since 2006, there has been no loss of focus despite being part of the historic success at the Covid-stricken Beijing Games. Beijing gold medallist Jennifer Dodds is part of a new-look women's curling team (Andrew Milligan/PA) 'Winning that gold medal was me achieving my lifelong dream, something I've dreamed of since I was eight or 10 years old,' Dodds added. 'That was the big thing for me, figuring out what I wanted to do for the next four years, readjusting my goals and getting that purpose. 'I want these girls to experience what I experienced in Beijing. It doesn't matter if you win one gold medal or 100 gold medals, they are all so special because it is such a rare and hard thing to achieve.'

King's Trust Award for teens after incredible gesture - 'people were struggling'
King's Trust Award for teens after incredible gesture - 'people were struggling'

Daily Mirror

time9 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

King's Trust Award for teens after incredible gesture - 'people were struggling'

After the loneliness of lockdown, two 14-year-olds pledged to bring people together. The result is a King's Trust Awards-winning hub that has become the heart of their community When Nathan Campbell and Ronnie Walters entered Year 7 at their high school, Dixons Unity Academy in Leeds, secondary education was very different to how they pictured it. It was 2020 and as the country was placed on lockdown they, and the rest of the school, were sent home where they were stuck trying to continue their education, make new friends and adjust to their new environment. The experience was so unnerving and isolating that when they were challenged to devise an ethical business as part of their business studies BTEC in Year 9, when they were 14, the pair knew what to do: they needed to create a place that brings people together. ‌ Unity Community was born, initially in their school's unused woodworking room, and as it outgrew that space, in the old library. Two years on, it's a thriving hub that opens its doors every Friday to people in the community, mothers and babies, fellow students, and anyone who's looking for some company. ‌ Tea and coffee are on offer, along with free food donated by nearby supermarkets Aldi and Morrisons, while Greggs also contributes pastries. There are toys for little ones to play with and a uniform and clothes swap. In short, it's the kind of place that every community needs, and it was conceived by two young men with a sense of empathy and awareness that is far beyond their, now, 16 years. 'One of the main issues after Covid was isolation,' says Ronnie. 'People were struggling - they were at home, by themselves and separate. The community needed something that could bring them back together but somewhere they could also get what they needed.' Their memories of lockdown are still fresh. 'The transition from Year 6 to 7 was non-existent,' says Nathan. 'We were thrown in the deep end. It was chaos - separate classrooms, bubbles and isolation.' With two parents working on the NHS frontline who then had to self-isolate at home to reduce the risk of infection, Nathan felt the loneliness of Covid keenly. 'I was so desperate because I was stuck doing homeschooling and wondering, 'why can't I see my mum and dad? Why do they have to be in their rooms for a solid two hours?' I thought that if I'm feeling like that, other people will be feeling it too.' Meanwhile, Ronnie's lockdown started earlier than his peers. 'I have asthma so I had to be off school for longer. I was sent home three or four weeks before everyone else.' ‌ The friends took part in the 2023 inter-school competition, the King's Trust Enterprise Challenge, and although they didn't win, they continued on with the hub and have seen it grow into a weekly fixture, largely thanks to word of mouth. 'We started out being part of the then Princes' Trust Enterprise Challenge,' Nathan says. 'We had to set up a sustainable business and it had to be ethical at the same time. We came up with this idea for a community place, so people could come together and support each other.' ‌ The result is that they have won the 2025 The King's Trust JD Foundation Community Impact Award, which has partnered with the Mirror this year. The duo attended an awards ceremony at the Royal Albert Hall which was attended by stars including George Clooney, his wife Amal Clooney, Kate Garraway, Tasha Ghouri, Sam Thompson and Jamie Laing. A teacher at the Unity Academy, Angie Germain, takes care of the day-to-day running of the hub since Nathan and Ronnie are in lessons, but they still take whatever time they can to attend. ‌ Open to the community, a representative from the DWP is there every week to help people with form filling; recently 50 Hub-goers joined a litter pick, and there's now a timetable of events including one of the regulars, who's a sushi chef, giving a sushi masterclass. Ronnie got his first taste of business negotiation when he sat in meetings with Greggs and Morrisons, who donate fruit and veg to reduce the impact of food waste in Leeds. While Nathan, who was inspired by a Second World War poster with the phrase, 'Make do and mend', brought the school's old sewing machines out of storage and put them to good use. 'People can bring any sort of damaged clothing in for repairs. People do bag repairs too, so if your school bag is torn they'll help mend it,' he says. 'I thought, why waste something perfectly useful when it will cost something when it's bought completely new?' ‌ They've enjoyed their partnership. Ronnie says: 'We were looking at the overarching problems and we built on each other's ideas. We always get along and don't seem to say anything that goes against each other.' What's next for Unity Community? 'A big push is getting a kitchen area to try and teach cooking skills,' says Ronnie, who hopes to become a teacher. And even though the youngsters are coming to the end of their time at the high school, they still pledge to remain involved in the Hub. Ronnie, who will be doing teaching work experience at his old school and lives close by, says, 'I'll stay as connected as possible. Nathan, who sees a future career in history or politics, adds: 'I want to be a part of it for as long as possible, for the long term. I couldn't predict that it would go as far as it has already. It could keep growing and growing.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store