The press release below has been issued today on behalf of the Highgate Men’s Pond Association, the Highgate Lifebuoys, the Kenwood Ladies’ Pond Association, the Mixed Pond Association and the United Swimmers’ Association, membership groups representing swimmers at the ponds on Hampstead Heath. Consultation with the City of London will resume tonight, Tuesday 11 February 2020.
The City of London is about to
railroad through changes at the world-famous swimming ponds on Hampstead Heath that
will hit the most vulnerable, including those for
whom access to the ponds is vital for their mental and physical health, say
swimmers’ groups.
The
groups say the City of London appears to have decided to enforce payment and
increase charges even though it is in the middle of a consultation.
Frustrated
swimmers say they have been asking the City for years to improve payment
options but nothing has happened. The City’s decision, they say, is not only
damaging to those who rely on the ponds, it is against the City of London’s own
‘Heath Vision’ of 2019.
If
allowed to go through, the move has potential implications for wild swimmers
across the country, say the groups representing regular swimmers at the Men’s, Women’s
and Mixed ponds.
Swimming in the ponds was free for
centuries until the City of London took over ownership of Hampstead Heath and,
in 2005, decided to introduce charges. Some swimmers maintain there is a
historic right to swim free of charge, but many others are willing to
voluntarily pay a reasonable contribution towards the running costs and
staffing of the ponds.
User groups point to the City of
London’s extreme inefficiency in collecting payment from those who are willing
to pay. They say that for years they have been asking the City to make payment
easier, but they have failed to introduce contactless
payment, replace ticket machines that don’t work or make it possible to renew
season tickets online.
Swimmers
also believe that the introduction of mechanised gates or turnstiles and staff
charged with ‘enforcement’ would destroy the peaceful and natural environment
that attracts people to the ponds in the first place. In addition, they fear
that people deterred by charges would be tempted to swim in non-lifeguarded
ponds on Hampstead Heath at considerable risk of injury, illness or even death.
Chris Piesold, chair of the
Highgate Men’s Pond Association commented ‘It would be tragic if the City of
London, one of the wealthiest local government authorities in the world, was
allowed to destroy the unique character of Hampstead Heath and its ponds.’ He
continued, ‘we stand ready to work with the City to find imaginative and
sensitive ways of achieving sustainability in the current financial climate.’
Julia Dick, co-chair of the Kenwood
Ladies’ Pond Association, added ‘we believe we have a duty to ensure that
swimming in the ponds remains affordable and accessible to all.’
The review follows advice to the
City of London from the Health & Safety Executive that it should increase
lifeguard provision at all its swimming facilities at a time when the budget
for all its open spaces, including Hampstead Heath is frozen. The user groups
say they recognize the financial pressures but want the Heath management to
work with them to achieve an increase in revenue and find ways of making the
ponds more sustainable.