New 50-metre pool vital for young athletes
Peterborough's Regional Pool has begun to be bulldozed after reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete (Raac) was discovered in the building, which left City of Peterborough Swimming Club (Cops) without a home.
Ben Negus, from Cops, said plans to build a replacement facility "would mean Peterborough can do what it deserves [for] its swimming community".
Peterborough City Council said "plans for a new leisure centre continue to be explored" and it was "working to bring a business case forward to cabinet soon".
"We continue to seek investors interested in supporting a new pool development," the authority added.
Raac was discovered in September 2023 at the Bishop's Road site, which also had issues with asbestos and out-of-date mechanical installations.
The building's demolition will take until July, the authority said.
It was hoped that a replacement pool, which would be built at an estimated cost of £30m, would be open by 2028.
Previously, Mr Negus said the pool's closure had forced the club's athletes to find alternative locations to train.
Lily, 17, who has been part of the club since she was six, said training without a dedicated pool is "hard".
Bell Cameron, 18, who is part of Cops, said the sport has given her "life skills".
"It has even allowed me to go to university in the US. Marshall University in West Virginia reached out to me, I will be going this summer."
Mr Negus said a plan for an Olympic-sized 50-metre swimming pool was first floated about 18 years ago and he was "still waiting".
Andrew Pakes, the Labour MP for Peterborough, said he believed a new 50 metre pool could be built in the city within five years.
"The council has a plot of land in the city centre at the regional pool site. And it is important to keep it in the city centre," Pakes said.
"The council will be available to put some money into it, we can get some money from the regeneration funds from the mayor, some money from additional partners and we have a good chance to get this going."
He said the council now "needs to focus" on things that matter to the public.
Follow Peterborough news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
Demolition of Raac-affected pool begins
What is next for the Regional Pool?
Coach of swimming club without a pool scoops award
City of Peterborough Swimming Club
Peterborough City Council
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


UPI
a few seconds ago
- UPI
Trump to lead task force on '28 Summer Olympics
Aug. 5 (UPI) -- President Donald Trump will lead a new high-level task force that will direct federal resources toward preparing for the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Trump on Tuesday announced the creation of the task force that will include Cabinet secretaries and other senior administration officials he said will mobilize "the entire federal government to ensure the games are safe, seamless and historically successful." The task force, created by an executive order, will coordinate the federal government's security, transportation and "entry/exit" functions for the games that are expected to draw millions of people over the course of roughly two weeks to Los Angeles in July 2028. Trump and Vice President JD Vance will serve as the respective chair and vice chair of the task force with a forthcoming executive director who will oversee its day-to-day operations. "I think it's going to be amazing," said Trump. "America is a nation of champions, and in July 2028 we'll show the world what America does best, and that's when we're winning like we have never won before." Speaking at the press event, Casey Wasserman, chairman of the 2028 L.A. Olympics organizing committee, said the Games will attract more than 150 heads of state and will host approximately 11,000 Olympic and 4,500 Paralympic athletes in 800 competitions at 49 venues. He said the Games will be the equivalent of putting on seven Super Bowls a day for 30 days and thanked Trump for his support. It's not clear how the task force will interface with local authorities in Los Angeles, where the city's Democratic leaders have clashed with the Trump administration over its aggressive approach to immigration and the president's deployment of National Guard troops to the city to quell violent protests. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass has called the Trump administration's deployment of U.S. troops to MacArthur Park "un-American" and supported the city's move to join a lawsuit seeking to halt immigration raids. Bass said in a post on X Saturday that the city will be ready for the Olympics and will not let the Trump administration "divide us." Trump took a swipe at Bass during Tuesday's press conference, saying he would use the National Guard or the military to keep the event safe. "Because, obviously, you have a mayor that is not very competent," he said. Trump earlier signed an executive order intended to keep transgender athletes out of women's sports. He said there will be a "strong form of testing" to prevent transgender athletes from participating in the Olympics and suggested his administration may pursue charges.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Social Security phasing out paper checks as Trump pushes payment overhaul
The Trump administration's effort to modernize federal payment systems is coming to Social Security, which will start phasing out paper Social Security checks. The Social Security Administration (SSA) announced in mid-July that it would no longer issue paper checks starting on Sept. 30. Advertisement The agency noted in a blog post announcing the move that electronic funds transfers (EFTs) get payments to beneficiaries faster than paper checks, while also providing increased security against fraud and saving the federal government millions of dollars annually – as paper checks cost about 50 cents each to issue while EFTs are less than 15 cents. While the SSA is looking to transition as many beneficiaries as possible to direct deposit or a prepaid debit card designed for federal benefit payments, known as the Direct Express card, the agency does plan to continue issuing paper checks under some limited circumstances. Most Social Security beneficiaries have already transitioned away from paper checks, though the SSA says it's working to notify those who are receiving paper checks about the upcoming changes and how to prepare. 3 The SSA said that they will no longer issue paper checks starting on Sept. 30. MargJohnsonVA – Advertisement 'Less than one percent of Social Security Administration currently receive paper checks. SSA is proactively contacting those beneficiaries to alert them about the change and the process to enroll in direct deposit or receive Direct Express cards. Where a beneficiary has no other means to receive payment, we will continue to issue paper checks,' a Social Security spokesperson told FOX Business. At the time of the agency's announcement in July, the SSA said that in addition to reaching out to beneficiaries receiving paper checks directly, it will include an insert with all benefit checks that explains how a beneficiary can transition to electronic payments with the assistance of SSA technicians. 3 Donald Trump delivers remarks before signing an executive order to create a White House Olympics task force to handle security and other issues related to the LA 2028 summer Olympic games, August 5, 2025. REUTERS SSA's announcement that paper checks are being phased out also noted the security concerns with mailing checks to beneficiaries. Advertisement 'Paper checks are 16 times more likely to be lost or stolen compared to electronic payments, increasing the risk of fraud. Electronic payments provide a safer, more secure way to receive benefits,' SSA wrote. The electronic payment push is being pursued under an executive order issued by President Donald Trump in March, as well as federal policies that predated the second Trump administration to encourage electronic payments. 3 The majority of Social Security beneficiaries have already moved away from paper checks. visuals6x – SSA noted in its mid-July announcement that beneficiaries may update their payment options at any time online through their personal Social Security account. Advertisement The agency also has an informational webpage outlining how beneficiaries can enroll in direct deposit or obtain a Direct Express card.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Could Trump's new Olympics task force be a guise for further militarizing L.A.?
In recent days, my social media is full of photos from one year ago, when I was at the Paris Olympics. The pictures create pleasant memories of an event that was spectacularly run, mostly glitch-free and agenda-free and widely embraced by the world. These trips down memory lane signify there are less than three years left before Los Angeles is scheduled to host the next Summer Games. That's a short runway for such a massive event. And L.A.'s runway is littered with debris and hurdles. On Tuesday, the Trump administration announced the formation of a White House task force for the 2028 Games. The task force will focus on security and other logistics, including visa processing for foreign visitors. Such an organization is normal: Federal governments are usually heavily involved in the coordination of Olympic logistics. The recently signed tax bill provides $1 billion for security and other Olympic related costs. But as with so many issues surrounding LA28, every piece of news raises more questions than it answers. How will this new federal entity work with Mayor Karen Bass and Gov. Gavin Newsom, who both have antagonistic relationships with Trump? How will the federal government's involvement with the oversight of the Olympic games be impacted by its aggressive immigration raids in Southern California and the subsequent lawsuits against the administration? How will Trump work effectively with a heavily Democratic city that he's called a 'trash heap' and has painted as a dangerous, lawless place? Could the administration use the guise of the Olympics to further militarize its presence in Los Angeles? 'We'll do anything to keep the Olympics safe, including using our National Guard or military,' Trump said Tuesday. Among the members of the task force are adviser Stephen Miller, the man who has shaped Trump's draconian immigration policies, as well as Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, who enforces them. On Tuesday, Trump took the occasion of the task force announcement to further denigrate Bass and Newsom, to bang his anti-trans drum and go on a digression about smelt, among other topics. Los Angeles has an enormous job ahead. It's not unusual for host cities to bend to what seems a breaking point when shouldering such an enormous undertaking. Neither Athens (2004) nor Rio de Janeiro (2016) were fully prepared to host the Games, and the subsequent debt contributed to crippling economic crises in both cities. But Los Angeles has a particularly unique set of challenges. It is a city trying to recover from devastating wildfires last summer. That destruction has contributed to a debilitating budget crisis. The city is facing an October deadline in its negotiations with LA28 over the use of city workers — including police, traffic safety, garbage collectors and others — during the Olympics. LA28 has billed the games as a 'no cost' event for the city, but depending on how 'enhanced services' are defined, the city could face huge financial liability in overtime and staffing costs. A new ballot proposal, backed by hotel and restaurant workers, would require city-wide voter approval for the development or enhancement of any 'event center' of a certain size. If approved, that could impact several Olympic locales. And, of course, Los Angeles faces its age-old, ubiquitous problem: traffic. The Olympics were originally promised to be 'car-free' which is easier said than done; organizers have since stepped back a bit from that promise. The Paris Olympics managed to be car-free because they were held in a relatively small city connected by an exceptional metro system, with outlying venues accessible by train. Los Angeles isn't exactly Paris, and effective coordination between its existing rail line and a supplemental bus system will take a massive infusion of money. Beyond the logistical and financial complications is the existential question of what it means to host the Olympics — an event that is supposed to welcome the world — in a city that has been under siege because of the ethnicity of a large percentage of its population. There's the issue of whether international visitors will want to come to a city where they may be greeted with masked, armed agents rather than an Olympic embrace. The concern that some athletes and their families may not only be made to feel unwelcome but may be banned from participation, like the Venezuelan Little League team was until it received a last-minute exemption last week after the intervention of high-ranking politicians. There is fear that Trump will use the 2028 Games as a propaganda tool, reminiscent of Hitler's 1936 Olympics that were a celebration of the Third Reich. Some have called for the Games to be moved out of Los Angeles and out of the United States altogether, arguing that they are too costly and that they don't belong in an unwelcoming country. Despite the hurdles ahead, we've surely gone too far down the path to Los Angeles to turn back now. But if we were really looking for an alternative? Well, we'll always have Paris.