Keep Juneau Swimming: Protect Augustus Brown and Dimond Park Pools

Recent signers:
Joey Isturis Joey Isturis and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

The Juneau Assembly is facing a difficult reality: a $10–$12 million budget gap resulting from last fall’s voter-approved sales tax exemption and property tax cap. While these financial challenges are real and hard choices must be made, cuts to our community’s recreational services must be approached with extreme care.

In a community like Juneau, where long winters, challenging weather, and already limited indoor options affect both physical and mental health, our pools are essential, not optional. They provide critical access to exercise, routine, and social connection for residents of all ages.

For seniors, the pools offer one of the safest and most effective ways to remain active. Low-impact aquatic exercise preserves mobility, reduces pain, and supports overall health. Equally important, for many seniors the pool is a primary source of social connection and mental wellbeing.

For children and families, our pools provide lifesaving swim education. Juneau is a community surrounded by water, and early swim instruction is a matter of safety - not recreation. Demand for swim lessons already exceeds capacity. Any cuts to hours or facility closures would further reduce access, increase waitlists, and prevent more children from learning essential water-safety skills in a water-dependent community.

The pools are also essential to programs like Glacier Swim Club (GSC), one of Juneau’s oldest and strongest year-round youth sports organizations, serving nearly 200 youth annually. GSC not only fosters belonging, discipline, and resilience in Juneau’s youth, but also shapes them into engaged community members, strengthening our community for generations.

Beyond individual programs, these facilities are key to retaining and attracting young families. Safe, affordable recreation is a major factor in whether families choose to stay in Juneau. Weakening Parks & Recreation amenities sends the wrong message about our community’s priorities, and the long-term cost to our community far outweighs any short-term budget savings.

Signing this petition is only a first step! We encourage everyone who feels passionate about protecting our community’s recreational facilities to take further action, as outlined below.

Take Action:

  • Spread the Word: Email and text the petition to friends who value Juneau’s recreational facilities.
  • Post the Petition: Share it on your personal Facebook and Instagram pages and ask your Juneau friends to sign.
  • Email the Assembly: Send a message to BoroughAssembly@juneau.gov explaining why saving our pools (and other recreational facilities) matters to you, your family and our community. 
  • Mark your Calendar: Wednesday, April 29th at 5:30PM is the next public meeting, a critical moment for our voices to be heard.
  • Show up Strong: Sign up to speak or stand in support of those who do.

Meeting Information: Wednesday, April 29, 2026 @ 5:30pm: SPECIAL ASSEMBLY MEETING 2026-09

  • Contact  CBJ Assembly Members before the meeting
  • Request to comment remotely by calling 907-586-5278 before 4pm on April 29
  • Attend in person: 155 Heritage Way, Juneau, AK 99801(Public comment on non-agenda items is at the start of the 5:30 meeting.)
  • Attend remotely: Zoom Meeting or 1-253-215-8782 Webinar ID: 939 1791 5176 (Public comment on non-agenda items is at the start of the 5:30 meeting.)

1,252

Recent signers:
Joey Isturis Joey Isturis and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

The Juneau Assembly is facing a difficult reality: a $10–$12 million budget gap resulting from last fall’s voter-approved sales tax exemption and property tax cap. While these financial challenges are real and hard choices must be made, cuts to our community’s recreational services must be approached with extreme care.

In a community like Juneau, where long winters, challenging weather, and already limited indoor options affect both physical and mental health, our pools are essential, not optional. They provide critical access to exercise, routine, and social connection for residents of all ages.

For seniors, the pools offer one of the safest and most effective ways to remain active. Low-impact aquatic exercise preserves mobility, reduces pain, and supports overall health. Equally important, for many seniors the pool is a primary source of social connection and mental wellbeing.

For children and families, our pools provide lifesaving swim education. Juneau is a community surrounded by water, and early swim instruction is a matter of safety - not recreation. Demand for swim lessons already exceeds capacity. Any cuts to hours or facility closures would further reduce access, increase waitlists, and prevent more children from learning essential water-safety skills in a water-dependent community.

The pools are also essential to programs like Glacier Swim Club (GSC), one of Juneau’s oldest and strongest year-round youth sports organizations, serving nearly 200 youth annually. GSC not only fosters belonging, discipline, and resilience in Juneau’s youth, but also shapes them into engaged community members, strengthening our community for generations.

Beyond individual programs, these facilities are key to retaining and attracting young families. Safe, affordable recreation is a major factor in whether families choose to stay in Juneau. Weakening Parks & Recreation amenities sends the wrong message about our community’s priorities, and the long-term cost to our community far outweighs any short-term budget savings.

Signing this petition is only a first step! We encourage everyone who feels passionate about protecting our community’s recreational facilities to take further action, as outlined below.

Take Action:

  • Spread the Word: Email and text the petition to friends who value Juneau’s recreational facilities.
  • Post the Petition: Share it on your personal Facebook and Instagram pages and ask your Juneau friends to sign.
  • Email the Assembly: Send a message to BoroughAssembly@juneau.gov explaining why saving our pools (and other recreational facilities) matters to you, your family and our community. 
  • Mark your Calendar: Wednesday, April 29th at 5:30PM is the next public meeting, a critical moment for our voices to be heard.
  • Show up Strong: Sign up to speak or stand in support of those who do.

Meeting Information: Wednesday, April 29, 2026 @ 5:30pm: SPECIAL ASSEMBLY MEETING 2026-09

  • Contact  CBJ Assembly Members before the meeting
  • Request to comment remotely by calling 907-586-5278 before 4pm on April 29
  • Attend in person: 155 Heritage Way, Juneau, AK 99801(Public comment on non-agenda items is at the start of the 5:30 meeting.)
  • Attend remotely: Zoom Meeting or 1-253-215-8782 Webinar ID: 939 1791 5176 (Public comment on non-agenda items is at the start of the 5:30 meeting.)

The Decision Makers

Juneau City and Borough Assembly
8 Members
1 Responded
Paul Kelly
Juneau City and Borough Assembly - At Large
As a citizen, I appreciate the petition circulating online to keep the pools open. My wife and kids frequently use the pool, and I’m a frequent user of the Dimond Park Field House. As an Assembly member, I also appreciate the flood of emails landing in our inboxes. I agree with many of the arguments and reasoning that people have sent us about why the pools, the field house, and the ice rinks should be prioritized. The hard truth though, is that it’s going to take more than words. Our two pools receive $2 million per year, and we subsidize $300,000 annually to run the field house. The ice rink receives about a half-million dollars in taxpayer subsidies per year. We’re facing an annually occurring shortfall of around $12 million in lost revenue from the outcome of last year’s elections, and those funds need to come from somewhere. In the surveys and focus groups the community has overwhelmingly said no to cutting essential services like public safety and education. I’m also trying to prioritize public transportation, housing, and keeping our streets maintained in the summer and plowed in the winter. While landscaping might look like an easy target, that’s also the budget for keeping our playgrounds safe, inspected, and open to the public. Budgeting responsibly means that recurring annual expenses require recurring revenue sources. Unless we as the Assembly or you as the people can find alternate revenue to continue subsidizing these facilities, we will all feel the impacts somewhere. We as an Assembly are working on ideas to be creative and to minimize the impacts of cuts to the people of Juneau. Paul Kelly City and Borough of Juneau Assembly member - Areawide
Ella Adkison
Juneau City and Borough Assembly - At Large
Greg Smith
Juneau City and Borough Assembly - District 1
Beth Weldon
Juneau City and Borough Mayor

Supporter Voices

Petition Updates