CROMARTY COMMUNITY INDOOR TENNIS CENTRE (CCITC)
A Public Hub Facility Serving The Entire CBRM
 Registered 2006 - Nova Scotia Societies Act / Registered  2008 - CRA Canadian Charitable Organization (Tax Number: 848036968RR0001)
ccitc@cromartytennis.ca - www.cromartytennis.ca/ccitc - Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada

A Cromarty Tennis Club Player of c. 1928A Cromarty Tennis Club Player of c. 1928A Cromarty Tennis Club Player of c. 1928A Cromarty Tennis Club Player of c. 1928A Cromarty Tennis Club Player of c. 1928A Cromarty Tennis Club Player of c. 1928

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January 20, 2009

"Indoor Tennis Group 'Shovel Ready'"

By Greg MacVicar

Indoor tennis group 'shovel ready'

Finding the money the next big hurdle


BY GREG MACVICAR
     CAPE BRETON POST

SYDNEY - Playing on a cushioned court in a bright, spacious and warm building is the dream of local tennis enthusiasts who previously got their winter tennis fix by clearing snow from an outdoor court and playing in temperatures that dipped below 10 degrees Celsius.

"We played January, February, March," said Eric Krause, chairman of the Cromarty Community Indoor Tennis Centre, a Sydney-based charitable organization formed in 2006 with the ultimate goal of erecting a building devoted to year-round indoor tennis. "We played every day outdoors. But I decided it was too much work for all of us."

The CCITC got a big boost in December when the Sydney Airport Authority offered the group a 25-year lease on a plot of land near the airport for the centre, with access to sewer and water.

"We're 'shovel ready' like everybody says you have to be," said Krause. "We just don't have the money yet."

The building the group has in mind is a pre-engineered steel structure, 140 feet long, 80 feet wide, with walls 26 feet high and a maximum height of 39 feet at the central ridge, featuring one cushioned doubles court, 60 feet wide and 120 feet long, a number of children's courts and washrooms.

Krause estimates the minimum cost of the building at $400,000, with an engineered slab, insulation and cushioned court expected to be the priciest items on the centre's materials list.

The proposed cushioned floor will consist of several layers of rubber topped by an acrylic playing surface.

"That means it's good for young legs and old legs;' said Krause, a 66-year-old retired Fortress of Louisbourg historian and archivist, who's been playing tennis since he was 10 years old. "You don't get these knee injuries. It's a completely different game."

The CCITC, which is a tax-exempt Sydney-based charitable organization and registered with the Canada Revenue Agency, recently kicked off a charity donation drive.

"When it comes to the naming the facility itself, we're looking for a donor," said Krause. "If we get a major donor, we're more than happy to put their name on it."

He said a realistic scenario would see one third of the centre's cost being covered by donations, one third from the Nova Scotia Department of Health Promotion and Protection, and one third in government infrastructure grants.

The health promotion department requires a group to have two-thirds of its funding in place by February of any given year before the department turns over its one-third and that money has to be spent within one year, so unless the CCITC gets a big infusion of cash in the next couple of weeks, the earliest they'll have 'shovels in the ground' is late-winter or early-spring 2010.

The group envisions a public facility available on a first-come, first-served basis, providing tennis lessons to students as a part of their school curriculum and offering training courses for tennis coaches, officials and instructors. The organization also plans to provide tennis programs for elderly players and disabled players.

To make a donation to the CCITC, visit www.cromartytennis.ca/ccitc  and click on the link to CanadaHelps.org. Income tax receipts will be issued immediately.

__________________
gmacvicar@cbpost.com

 


March 11, 2009

Letter to the Editor - Eric Krause

"Indoor Tennis Project Has A Foot In Both Camps"
 

Indoor tennis project has a foot in both camps
The Cape Breton Post

The recent opinion articles by Dr. Chris Milburn (Weekend Feedback: Palatial Fitness Centre an Extravagance Region Doesn’t Need, Feb. 28) and Dr. Andrew Lynk (Weekend Feedback: ‘Big Box’ Fitness Facilities Can Co-Exist with Community Assets, March 7) and others have been of great interest to the Cromarty Community Indoor Tennis Centre, which is fundraising to construct its “small-box,” all-season public facility on property at the Cape Breton Airport Authority.

In a way, our charity plans fall into both schools of thought.

As Dr. Lynk sees the fitness complex, we see our facility (obviously most valuable during inclement days of summer and winter) serving the entire Cape Breton Regional Municipality in a hub capacity.

However, more in line with Dr. Milburn’s view, we see the benefit of a satellite facility one day built on the Northside, with our proposed structure serving as a model.
Given the present circumstances (existing land, secured government and local funding, and a dedicated society), in this instance Dr. Lynk clearly wins.

As for the claim that he is part of an elite group, no, he is not, as I observed during several early meetings to which I was graciously invited for my input on indoor racquet sports when they were originally being considered for this location.

Really, what we have here is a familiar refrain, the one centred upon the belief that “big-box,” expensive hubs or central facilities are best, versus the view that numerous less expensive (in individual units but not in total dollars) community facilities, built as close to their centres as possible, serve the public interest best.

In most instances, the side that gets the funds first wins the foot race, with the unfortunate result that the losing side would rather cut off its nose despite its face.

Eric Krause
chair, Cromarty Community Indoor Tennis Centre