Mosgiel residents make plea for pool

Mosgiel residents have called for Dunedin City councillors to give a multimillion-dollar aquatic facility the ''green light'' sooner rather than later.

In recognition of the level of interest in a $15 million four-pool aquatic facility the council held part of Monday's long-term plan hearings at Mosgiel's Salvation Army Hall.

Taieri Community Facilities Trust project manager Shaun Pont called on councillors to allocate $750,000 to the design phase of the new facility for the next financial year.

Providing that amount would show there was a ''a clear commitment from council that you want to see this happen'' and would provide a catalyst for community fundraising.

If the council allocated a smaller figure, the project - included as an unfunded item in the plan - would flounder for another year and little progress would be made.

Trust chairwoman Irene Mosley said the council needed to make the most of the ''huge'' amount of goodwill from the community and volunteers and ''green light'' the project now.

If the council waited, it would become more difficult to raise funds and the ''high-calibre'' people who had donated their time to the project would become frustrated.

''You have got to act while there is a passion out there,'' Ms Mosley said.

Responding to a question from Cr Richard Thomson about how the trust came up with the $7.5 million figure for the amount the community could raise for the project, Ms Mosley said it was provided by consultant Compton Fundraising.

Based on her experience raising funds for other community projects, she believed it could reach that figure.

''I have more proof that we can raise it than the naysayers have that we can't.''

Cr Lee Vandervis was one of a number of councillors to indicate the council's financial position meant it faced a difficult choice whether to fund the pool complex or other projects.

Other submitters, including trust members and speakers from the community board, argued against having fewer than four pools - saying a four-pool complex, which included a hydrotherapy pool and a leisure pool, would be able to meet the needs of Mosgiel's different demographic groups.

Sport Otago chief executive John Brimble said it supported a new Mosgiel aquatic facility.

A new pool complex would provide increased access to the successful ''swim to survive'' programme aimed at improving swim safety among Dunedin's children.

However, Sport Otago and Sport New Zealand believed, based on population trends, there was only a need for a two-pool complex, not a four-pool one.

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