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Letter to the editor: Investing in children and youth - support for Dease Pool

We writing this letter to kindly ask City Council to invest the financial resources needed to refurbish or rebuild Dease Pool.
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Letters to the editor 330x220 - with text

To the editor:

We writing this letter to kindly ask City Council to invest the financial resources needed to refurbish or rebuild Dease Pool. This is a much needed amenity for families in the neighbourhood, especially children and youth. The pool has been a summer attraction in the area for generations, bringing residents together and building positive relationships. The Regional Multicultural Youth Council (RMYC) is aware that more young people utilize the pool than go to all the youth drop-in centres the City has tried to operate across Thunder Bay.

Closing Dease Pool will have a negative impact on the well-being of the youth. It will deprive them of a popular well supervised safe place to interact, exercise, socialize, grow together, and enjoy themselves. Our surveys, police reports and media coverage confirm that Thunder Bay is no longer a safe community it once was. Getting rid of the pool will not help to improve the city’s negative image. But investing in safe spaces to counter street gang influence, and maintaining inclusive healthy facilities to celebrate diversity, incorporate the teaching of life-skills, and educate kids and teens on the benefits of staying in school, volunteering, manners, responsible citizenship, the risks of using ‘legal’ marijuana, abusing prescription pills, alcohol and so forth will make a difference.

We realize the importance of fiscal accountability to prevent passing down debts to future generations. However, children are society’s greatest human resource, and providing them with what is well articulated in Thunder Bay Children’s Charter, will lay a solid foundation to enable the youth of today to become prosperous and cover the debts they will inherit. An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. It takes a village to raise a child, and we are pleased that many people are rallying to save Dease Pool. What is happening in our community is a result of a growing population of alienated and marginalized youths becoming disengaged and frustrated adults.

Children and youth should be involved in community development, empowered to be part of the solution to the problems they are facing, and supported to deal with social issues. Better communication with stakeholders and Council’s commitment to Dease Pool will show that children matter and are worth the investment. We are enclosing news articles about the City’s lack of support for our youth drop-in centre, and a report we produced ten years ago identifying social issues and the high-risk areas we believe would have saved the city from the social damage and more costly situation we find ourselves in today. We cannot not continue doing things the same way and expect different results. We need a positive message from City Hall, and the RMYC is willing to work with you to create the Thunder Bay we want and are proud of!

Yamaan Alsumadi and Heran Zhao, RMYC Co-Presidents

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