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But on Wednesday, she said the UWSA supports “any new initiatives or programs that serve to enhance student life and involvement on campus, while also serving those in our community.” The city’s $42-million plan calls for replacing the 51-year-old pool and replacing it with a new gym, plus adding an indoor walking track, music room, art room, fitness centre, commercial kitchen for cooking programs, dance studio, hub lounge with plenty of seating, and new outdoor facilities like a basketball court, tennis/pickleball courts, soft-surface playground, walking track and splash pad. When he was reached Wednesday, Havey declined an interview and provided a statement which said the new Lancer Centre “will promote and provide opportunities for physical and social activities across all ages and stages of life for both students and residents across Windsor and Essex County.” In June, students’ association president Jasleen Dayal said she and other student leaders were shocked when they learned about the new community-use agreement. “The difference, in our minds, is we’re going to run this pool for more hours because we’ll have more people than we’ve ever had in the (old) pool,” he said, adding that even with the community swimmers, the new eight-lane 25-metre pool will have ample capacity for everyone. He said the negotiations with the city were rushed because of a July 6 deadline the city had to meet to apply for up to $13.5 million in federal funds for the Adie Knox project.He said the public has always used university facilities, including the old pool that’s currently closed.
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“We could probably have done it differently, but at the same time we feel student interests have been protected,” he said, explaining that university officials were very sensitive to the fact that students are paying for the bulk of the cost to build the Lancer Centre and should get full access to it. “They say ‘Oh my gosh, wait, aren’t we paying for that, isn’t 75 per cent coming out of our pockets? It’s ridiculous.”In June, UWindsor athletic director Mike Havey acknowledged to the Star that students were not at the table for the discussions. “They were shocked, they were totally shocked,” said Skocic. Talking to students in recent weeks as the campus finally opened up, she heard from many who had no idea they’d be sharing the pool.

They are simply upset how the new agreement was foisted upon students without their input. In an interview, Skocic emphasized that her group - a recently formed “radical student voice” - doesn’t want to bar community members from using the new pool. It’s insulting, it’s ridiculous,” Amanda Skocic, spokesperson of the Windsor Independent Student Group (not to be confused with the school’s large University of Windsor Students’ Alliance), told a crowd of about 45 people who gathered after a march through the campus in rainy, windy conditions.

“How can we be paying $55 million towards a project that we don’t even get a say in? How can we be financing 75 per cent of this facility and not even get a say in it. Students are paying $55 million of the Lancer Centre’s cost through new annual fees ($125 rising to $200 in later years) over the next 30 years. Wednesday’s march through the campus sent the message that at least some students aren’t happy with the university agreeing to the deal without consulting them. So it negotiated paying UWindsor $3 million plus $200,000 annually to take on almost all the Adie Knox pool programs at the pool being built as part of its new $73-million Lancer Centre.

The city wants to use the pool - needing major costly repairs - space for a gym, indoor walking track and other amenities. Then the city stepped forward this summer with a $42-million plan to rejuvenate the 70-year-old Adie Knox property into a “community centre on steroids,” but without the pool. Friends of Adie Knox have been fighting against plans by the city to close their cherished but aging pool for a decade. Students, swimmers protest Adie Knox pool switchĪ soggy group of students and recreational swimmers vowed to “keep up the battle” Wednesday as they protested the looming shutdown of the Adie Knox pool and transfer of its swimming programs to a new University of Windsor pool funded largely by students.
