The Hamilton Spectator

Private swimming lessons popular amid pandemic

WeSwim owner has a waiting list for lessons — something she says is unusual

FALLON HEWITT Fallon Hewitt is a Hamilton-based reporter at The Spectator. Reach her via email: fhewitt@thespec.com

Hamilton parents are seeking out private swimming lessons in droves amid the pandemic. In fact, WeSwim owner Michelle Turco says she can’t keep up with demand.

“I get five to 10 emails a day from parents asking about our availability,” said Turco, 32. “I have a waiting list and a cancellation list.”

Turco founded WeSwim, a private swimming instruction company, in her parents’ backyard pool in Ancaster when she was 16 years old.

Operating out of private swimming pools — including those owned by clients, as well as indoor and outdoor pools available to rent — she offers swimming lessons, water fitness classes and parent-and-tot swims.

But for the first time in 16 years, Turco said she is struggling to keep up with requests for her services. Why is the demand so high?

One answer is a “lack of options,” she said.

City-run swimming lessons are only now restarting as the province and city lift pandemic-related restrictions and bring services back online. (Registration will open Friday, with programming expected to begin on Aug. 9, according to Laura Kerr, manager of program development.)

Those same restrictions have also kept many of the indoor private pools Turco typically rents shuttered — limiting the number of clients she can serve.

Some pools have reopened for bookings, while others have permanently closed, she added.

Meanwhile, Turco’s outdoor lessons, which she holds everywhere from Burlington to Stoney Creek, were only able to resume June 14.

“We still have 150 kids right now that we’re teaching, but if we had access to more pool space, we could potentially be doing 250,” said Turco — that was her pre-COVID capacity. But even then, she would have to turn some clients away.

“I’m constantly saying ‘no’ to parents, and I feel their frustration,” she said.

The shuttering of indoor pools has also impacted Turco’s business, which relies on being able to offer swimming lessons yearround — not just in the warm and sunny months.

As a consequence of the pandemic, “we lost 75 per cent of our revenue,” she said.

Turco’s students have also felt the fallout from the delays and lack of availability, Turco said, noting some children have “regressed” in their skills while others are learning much later in life.

“Swimming is a life skill … it should have been a priority throughout the pandemic,” said Turco.

“No ifs, ands or buts about it.”

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2021-07-27T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-27T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://thespec.pressreader.com/article/281552293891202

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