Alberta gym and fitness studio owners say they can't survive ongoing restrictions - Action News
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Alberta gym and fitness studio owners say they can't survive ongoing restrictions

A coalition of Alberta gyms and fitness studios says government restrictions are hurting their businesses and argue the services they provide are part of the solution, rather than the problem.

Facilities can reopen starting on Monday, but only for one-on-one training

Some gym owners are frustrated by Alberta's easing of public health restrictions, saying the rules don't make sense for themselves or their customers. (Terri Trembath/CBC)

A coalition of Alberta gyms and fitness studios says government COVID-19-related restrictions are hurting their businesses and argue the services they provide are part of the solutionrather than the problem.

The Alberta coalition of theFitness Industry Council of Canada (FIC)says it represents almost 200 gyms and studios in the province.

It says more than 50 per cent of the facilities it has surveyed say they will not survive another two months of closure. It arguesgyms and fitness studios are safe and can help alleviate some of the mental and physical strains inflicted by the pandemic.

Scott Wildeman,president of the council, says his organization is in direct talks with the government and appreciates the difficult position it's in.

He saysit's a positive step that the province has set benchmarks for when facilities could reopen.

"But as it relates to fitness, we feel Stage 1 has missed the mark on a number of areas by simply limiting access to private training sessions," said Wildeman.

Phased reopening

Under Alberta's phasedreopening plan, gyms and fitness studios can reopen on Monday, but under strict restrictions. Only one-on-one training is allowed and trainer-client pairs must stay three metres away from any other pairs.

The training must involve active instruction meaning atrainer can't just supervise aclient as they lift weights or jogon a treadmill.

The FIC says personal training is expensive and out of reach for the majority of Albertans and isn't enough to help cover the costs of fitness operations.

Stage 2, which would occur if hospitalizations drop below 450 patients, would see further easing of those restrictions, but the details have not been released.

Emily Slaneff, the owner of Crush Camp and chair of the Alberta coalition of the FIC,says she was forced to close one of her locations in July.

Gym closures could bring personal financial ruin

4 years ago
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An industry representative says Alberta's fitness owners are at the end of their ropes, facing closure and the loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars with the current and even future restrictions.

"I cut off an arm to save the body, so to speak," she said.

Slaneff says that involved terminating a lease,a bank loan and more.

"Nobody, not the bank, the landlord, utility companyor even my internet service provider, had sympathy for my situation or [had] programs in place to work with small businesses whose revenues had been severely handicapped by the pandemic," she said.

Contact tracing

The FIC wants to see more financial support for the industry, as well as tax deductions and government funding for individuals to access services.

FIC says there were four million workouts in the province at facilities between June and November with only 147 COVID-19 cases. Among them was a spin studioin Calgary, which was linked to more than 40 cases of COVID-19 last July.

However,Alberta's contact tracing system collapsed in the wake of soaring case counts, so many sources of infection are not known.

Andrew Obrecht, the ownerof YEG and YYCCycle spin studios, says businesses like his could help with that tracing.

"We have industry leading protocols, procedures and technologies to ensure that contact tracing is happening," he said.

"In fact, when instanceshave happened, our contact tracing within our own businesses hassometimes beat outphone calls that individuals have received from the government."

Next steps and new variants

Wildeman says his organization is focused on getting to the second stage of reopening as quickly as possible.

"What does it look like if that doesn't happen? It's pretty catastrophic," he said.

Alberta's chief medical officer of health, Dr. Deena Hinshaw, said on Wednesday that the province has to be cautious in its approach to reopening and while numbers continue to fall, hospitalizations and case counts remain far higher than in the spring.

Alberta reported 259 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, the lowest daily total in almost four months.

"It's important that we take a slow, phased approach to ensure we aren't doing too much too fast, especially as we learn more about the new variants of COVID-19 and work to prevent their spread in Alberta," Hinshaw said.

Premier Jason Kenney has said that with the arrival of the new, more potent, variants of the virus, more stringent restrictions might have to be put in place.