News / Kingsdown Sports Centre

Dismay as council pulls plug on funding Kingsdown Sports Centre

By Adam Postans  Wednesday Feb 9, 2022

Almost 100 campaigners battling to save a “vital” leisure centre held a protest ahead of a crunch decision by councillors to pull the plug on funding.

Bristol City Council’s cabinet confirmed at a meeting on Tuesday that the council will no longer run Kingsdown Sports Centre and instead look for another operator, or potentially the community, to take over.

It is part of a leisure strategy agreed by members that includes £8m to upgrade Easton and Horfield leisure centres and Bristol South Pool – although this is only half the amount required – as well as ending financial support for Jubilee Pool, which is undergoing a community asset transfer to keep it open.

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Mayor Marvin Rees told the meeting that the council had already received interest from organisations to take on Kingsdown and that the decision did not mean it would necessarily shut.

But centre users and Cotham ward councillors, who presented a 2,000-name petition urging the Labour cabinet to change its mind, fear it will now close.

Guy Poultney, a Green councillor for Cotham, told the meeting: “There is no support for this policy or for the council to stop operating Kingsdown Sports Centre.

“There is an overwhelming majority who want to keep Kingsdown as a local civic sports centre. We also know from the petition how many people from outside of Cotham are coming to use the sports centre.”

He said results from the public consultation showed 71 per cent wanted to keep it open.

Campaigners told the meeting the council was basing its decision on “misleading” and “seriously flawed” information, including counting four people using a badminton court as only a single user in its assessment, which did not show the true extent of usage.

Geoff Collard said: “It is frankly insulting and disingenuous of the mayor to say you’re not intending to close the centre.

“The effective decision is to stop operating the centre, and without council support, it will go under.”

He said the council did not think that part of Bristol merited public money because of the relatively high income of some residents and that this “smacks of discimination”.

Rees said: “This is not a decision to close Kingsdown. We are looking for alternative operators. It’s about searching for a solution.

“It’s not a policy to close anything down. It’s in line with our responsibility to work within the financial confines of this authority.

“I understand the passion for sport. We don’t want any sports facilities to be closed down. We want young people to have that physical health, mental health, community buildings, sports teams.

“With some services in need of expansion and renovation, we need to have a criteria and a rationale to determine how we direct our investment and spending decisions.

“So we’ve looked at leisure centre usage both in terms of footfall and usage of people who live in deprived areas.”

He said he trusted the data from the operators and council officers.

Rees added: “Kingsdown’s operating contract is up in March 2023. We have already had several expressions of interest from organisations who are exploring an alternative lease arrangement with us, and we are looking on those favourably as a solution.”

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Read more: Possible lifeline for threatened sports centre

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A report to cabinet said five organisations had expressed an early interest in running the centre so the council was “confident” it would stay open following negotiations and approvals.

It said that to bridge the £7.8m funding gap for the upgrades elsewhere, “potential providers will be asked to bring forward additional investment as part of their bids to achieve the maximum benefits at the three sites”.

The council is pulling funding from Kingsdown Sports Centre – photo: Martin Booth

After the meeting, Poultney said: “The community and people who use Kingsdown Sports Centre are understandably upset – it means a lot to us.

“We should be investing in mental and physical health. Our sports centres need our support. The mayor cut the funding anyway. It’s a disgrace.”

Main photo: Richard Irvine 

Adam Postans is a local democracy reporter for Bristol 

Read more: ‘Closing Kingsdown Sports Centre would be unfair, wrong and possibly unlawful’

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