Quote:
Originally Posted by rubicon
The pool you refer to was located in the Sharon Morse building that once served as the Wellness Center. It had an indoor pool and was used primarily by people with medical needs. The Developer sold the Wellness Center to MVP and the pool was sold to whomever purchase space once belonging to the Wellness Center. MVP is a good addition here because members were granted one general membership which included group participation which about reduced Wellness costs by half.
It would seem to me that an indoor pool should be a private enterprise for those who desire one. It would seem that a public paid pool would draw anyone who wants something for free. a private pool would restrict the number of members to a manageable level
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Thanks for the information. Wouldn't a model similar to what is done with the Priority pools work for an indoor pool?