Tears flow at final pool dedication
All six facilities built under 2007 bond will be open this season
The city of Spokane dedicated its sixth – and final – new pool Wednesday at Liberty Park.
The skies were cloudy and threatening, but Hanna Franchino was ecstatic, remembering a far more threatening time in Spokane’s pool history.
In 2006, she got active in the grass-roots Citizens for Parks and Play Committee hoping to raise interest, and money, to rebuild Spokane’s pool legacy. The city’s six broken-down pools were a civic embarrassment.
“When we started, it looked like we would be a city without pools. It was scary,” she said.
Franchino and hundreds of other citizens worked toward the passage of a $43million pools and parks bond, which voters overwhelmingly approved in 2007.
Four new pools opened last year – Shadle, A.M. Cannon, Comstock and Hillyard. This will be the first season at the new Witter and Liberty aquatic centers.
About 30 people attended the ribbon-cutting.
“With each new pool, we have given our children a gift for the future,” Mayor Mary Verner said.
The dedication proceeded with no surprises, unlike the May 12 dedication of Witter, where the larger of the two pools was dedicated dry due to a leak, since repaired.
As Verner spoke Wednesday, Franchino – now a member of the Parks Bond Citizens Advisory Committee – wiped away tears.
“It’s silly – these are just swimming pools – but it makes me cry,” she said. “I think we’ve all done something for our little ones.”
Thank you for visiting Spokesman.com. To continue reading this story and enjoying our local journalism please subscribe or log in.
You have reached your article limit for this month.
Subscribe now and enjoy unlimited digital access to Spokesman.com
Unlimited Digital Access
Stay connected to Spokane for as little as 99¢!
Subscribe for access
You have reached your article limit for this month.
Subscribe now and enjoy unlimited digital access to Spokesman.com
Unlimited Digital Access
Stay connected to Spokane for as little as 99¢!
Subscribe for access
Oops, it appears there has been a technical problem. To access this content as intended, please try reloading the page or returning at a later time. Already a Spokesman-Review subscriber? Activate or Log in