Lyons Center is revitalized with public and private funds
10th June 2013 · 0 Comments
By Susan Buchanan
Contributing Writer
Last week, what are the best cash advance companies the city reopened the John P. Lyons Memorial Center at Louisiana and Tchoupitoulas with money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency and city bonds, along with Chevron and the NFL Foundation—fruits of the New Orleans Recreation Dept.’s transition to a public-private commission in 2010.
Young Audiences of Louisiana, or YALA, on Baronne St. last week launched a two-month youth camp at Lyons—teaching visual and performing arts, combined with science, technology, engineering and math. Jon Cosper, YALA’s director of afterschool and summer programs, discussed the need for recreation centers, saying “some of our schools don’t have arts programs. That’s because of budget cuts and because schools that are failing are focused on improving standardized test scores.” The Lyons Center fills a gap, he said.
Others cited a demand for summer sports. Last Monday, Mayor Mitch Landrieu kicked off the opening of the $4.9 million center, thanking FEMA, Chevron and the NFL Foundation. The mayor cut a ceremonial ribbon, shot a few hoops in the gym and jumped into the pool with some young swimmers. The city is on track to complete more than fifty capital projects this year after finishing two dozen last year.
The Lyons facility, across from the Harmony Street Wharf on the river, has a new roof; a freshly-laid gym floor with a wood stage and repaired bleachers; a dance studio; a computer lab; several class rooms; a commissary; a new air-cooling system and plumbing fixtures; and an updated, historic pool. FEMA provided $2.2 million for the renovation.
The mayor said the center payday loans derry nh will help keep kids focused on the future and off the streets.
Tara Schroeder, New Orleans Recreation Development Commission spokeswoman, said last week “the Lyons Center pool has been open every summer but the recreation center has been closed since Katrina.” The center’s roof was damaged in the hurricane and mold developed.
Last week, summer was off to the races at the facility. Lyons Center manager Jolene Jeff said “school’s out now so our current programs are mostly for kids and teens. Programs here will be for all ages, however. Starting this fall, we’ll have more adult and senior activities.”
Inside the building’s atrium, a door and windows open onto a mirrored, 3,000 square-foot dance studio, with bleachers—all funded by $115,00 from Chevron. Last week, dancers up to 18 years old whirled around the floor in a Chevron Master Artists Series workshop. Jeff pointed out an office that the New Orleans Ballet Association has next to the studio.
Across the atrium, a door opens into a computer classroom, paid for with $100,000 from Chevron and $25,000 from the NFL Foundation. Last week, the room had chairs but was waiting for equipment.
Three activity rooms, used by YALA and others this summer, are lined up in a hall behind the main desk. They were full of kids and instructors last Tuesday. Down the central corridor is the gleaming gym, where a YALA class was in progress. Nearby is a commissary, used for breakfast and lunch this summer. As for colors, San Antonio Tex. cash advance the center’s interior is awash in a hue that Jeff said the painters called “curry.” She said it’s always been one of her favorites.
Outside are the pool, a playground and a baseball field. Richard Hunter, senior lifeguard at Lyons, last week said the center’s 75-foot pool dates back to the Works Progress Administration era in the 1940s. “This pool is 2 to 9 feet deep and a dinosaur,” he said, but meant that in a good way. Because of insurance concerns, “you rarely see a public pool this deep anywhere in the country now.” To avoid accidents, diving boards at Lyons were removed after Katrina and replaced with a lifeguard stand. The pool had three manned stands last Tuesday.
This June and July, the pool’s mornings will be devoted to NORDC day camp and personalized swim classes. “We have one-on-one instruction every day this summer by appointment,” Hunter said. “Swimming is a life skill that parents want their kids to have. Lives were lost in Katrina because people couldn’t swim.”
The Lyons pool serves a range of Irish Channel and Lower Garden District residents. “On Tuesday, we have Kingsley House from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.,’” Hunter said. “On Monday, it’s Trinity Episcopal School from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m.” Kingsley House, serving families for 117 years, is on Constance St., and 53-year-old Trinity is nearby on Jackson Avenue.
Hunter blew his whistle at a few swimmers last Tuesday, and assisted others, including a boy who felt ill that afternoon. Curious parents stopped cash advance marietta oh by with their kids to inspect the pool and ask about hours. One youngster accompanied by his dad wanted to jump in immediately.
Adult swimming lessons are Monday to Friday from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., and adult water aerobics are Tuesday and Thursday from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.
The pool has 24-hour-a-day security, mainly to prevent kids from jumping over the fence for an after-hours swim.
One thing the pool lacks is shade. Hunter said “we can’t put up temporary canopies because of wind off the river. The lifeguard chairs blow into the pool in high winds. We tell everyone to wear sunscreen and bring a hat.”
Kara Morgan, president of the Irish Channel Neighborhood Association, said last week “our group, along with the Faubourg Delachaise Neighborhood Association and the Lyons-Burke Booster Club, are raising money for permanent shade at the Lyons pool—something bolted down, like the shade at the Jewish Community Center” on St. Charles at Jefferson. She said it’s a goal for next summer.
Morgan said the past eight years at the Lyons Center mirror the pace of the city’s post-Katrina recovery. “After ups and downs, Lyons is where it should be now,” she said. One setback was a $300,000 theft of copper tubes and wiring in April 2009. “Hearsay is that the two vandals caught by the police lived in the building for awhile that spring,” Morgan said.
Cosper said “squatting, and public and private building robberies were a problem cash loans city for several years after Katrina. It was a challenge to patrol and secure buildings.”
In January 2008, the Brees Dream Foundation—founded by Brittany and Drew Brees—opened the Lyons Center playground with the Illinois-based Allstate Foundation and New York-based Injury Free Coalition for Kids. Last week, a throng of children climbed its equipment.
Neighbors take their kids and dogs to the Lyons Center baseball field, Morgan said, but she added “it still needs some work.”
The new Lyons Center was designed by Wayne Troyer Architects on Tchoupitoulas St. and renovated by Ryan Gootee General Contractors in Metairie, along with a number of local, Disadvantaged Business Enterprise or DBE contractors.
Meanwhile, NORDC is trying to maintain services during federal budget cuts that include a loss of $700,000 in Community Development Block Grants this year from the U.S. Dept. of Housing & Urban Development. The commission continues to line up private funds through the NORD Foundation and has made some operational changes. NORDC’s budget is $9.5 million this year, versus $10.2 million last year, but more than double its size in 2010.
The NORD Foundation was formed in late 2010 as the fund-raising arm of the commission.
According to NORDC, the commission has raised $1.86 million in private funds since 2010 for capital projects. Part of that was through a Super Bowl Legacy program, linked to the Feb. 3, 2013 bowl, assisting five parks and centers—including Lyons. Another $1.17 million in private funds has been rounded up from the Chevron Teen Futures Program, Fit NOLA Parks and other groups since 2010 for NORDC operations, programs and specific needs.
For aquatics alone, NORDC was given $90,000 by Boh Brothers on South Tonti St. and $25,000 by the Metairie-based Joe W. and Doro?thy Dorsett Brown Foundation. The Brown Foundation earmarked its funds for year-round programs at the Joe W. Brown Pool in New Orleans East. Additionally, the Southeast Louisiana Chapter of the American Red Cross is funding year-round swimming lessons and lifeguard training under NORDC’s direction.
One way NORDC adjusted to the lost $700,000 in CDBG funds was to truncate the summer swim season to June and July since many city schools now start in early August. NORDC has opened 13 public pools this summer, the most since Katrina, and is running 35 youth camps—six more than last year. The commission has seven camps for teens this summer, and part of its summer agenda is to help teens plan careers.
NORD, formed in 1946 under Mayor Chep Morrison Sr., was considered a model for recreation programs across the nation in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Later, the city’s publicly funded R and R took some hits. Last week, NORDC chief Vic Richards said the new Lyons Center is a symbol of the commission’s progress in its quest to become one of the best recreation departments in the country.
The Lyons Center is named after slain World War II soldier John P. Lyons.
This article originally published in the June 10, 2013 print edition of The Louisiana Weekly newspaper.