麻豆社国产

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麻豆社国产gyms adapt during pandemic

Many facilities had mask policies before PHO order
fitness in gyms
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Operating a fitness facility in 麻豆社国产has been like going hard on a number of different exercises all at once, according to local owners.

Last week鈥檚 closure of fitness classes ordered by provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry were just another plate on the barbell for some.

Christopher Nguyen, co-owner of Mountain Fitness Center with Aaron Lal, said his Commercial Way facility was 鈥渟truggling鈥 without the ability to offer classes.

鈥淧eople here are very active and they like to have motivation and instruction and the uplifting [attitude] of our instructors and trainers,鈥 he said.

While the facility can still open its gym for individuals to come use, Nguyen noted that even if the order relaxes somewhat, he anticipates still having to figure out a way to rejig Mountain Fitness鈥 operations.

Mountain Fitness.
Mountain Fitness. - Courtesy Mountain Fitness

鈥淚f classes do come back, we鈥檒l definitely have to downsize it, maybe shorten it a bit so we can have more classes so everyone can have a fair share,鈥 he said.

Henry鈥檚 orders also mandated masks indoors in public spaces, but Nguyen said that the gym had already instituted its own policy requiring masks in early November as a means of keeping staff, guests and anyone in their bubbles healthy and safe 鈥 and the gym open.

鈥淲e鈥檝e had a lot of people huffing and puffing about masks but I hope they understand that there are people that we care for that have cancer. Although we are well, they may be not,鈥 he said.

Thomasina Pidgeon, owner of the 麻豆社国产Athletic Club, also had a policy in place before it was a requirement.

鈥淚 did let them take it off if they were on the treadmill and if there was nobody around them, so I guess the one thing that鈥檚 going to change because the mandate is that people will have to keep it on the whole time,鈥 she said.

While there have been a couple of members balk at protocols, Pidgeon said it鈥檚 鈥渓ess than 1%鈥 and the bulk of people will do what they need to in order to keep the gym open.

鈥淧eople are just, 鈥極h, I鈥檓 glad you鈥檙e open. I don鈥檛 care if I have to wear a mask anymore. As long as I can work out, then I鈥檓 happy,鈥欌 she said.

The facility, Squamish鈥檚 oldest, offers no classes or group work, so Pidgeon said they鈥檙e not losing much on that front.

麻豆社国产Athletic Club
麻豆社国产Athletic Club. - Courtesy 麻豆社国产Athletic Club

When the gym closed in March as the pandemic started to take hold across North America, Pidgeon said the gym was already starting to see lower numbers and she pivoted to helping people from a distance.

鈥淲e helped the members. They took some weights home, so that helped them a lot, too,鈥 she said. 鈥淢ental health is a huge thing and I鈥檓 really hoping that gyms don鈥檛 have to close because people come here for their wellbeing.

鈥淐OVID is a mental stress for people and to be able to come to the gym and burn off some energy, it鈥檚 a huge relief.鈥

麻豆社国产Athletic Club also benefitted from receiving some help on the rent front.

鈥淭he landlord was helpful, so we didn鈥檛 suffer as much as some people did, I think,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have a really good landlord. He is amazing. If I didn鈥檛 have him, we鈥檇 be in a different situation, but he was willing to help people, which goes a long way.

鈥淩ent鈥檚 not cheap.鈥

Nguyen, meanwhile, said while it鈥檚 a challenge to operate in the sector right now, unsure of what government aid may or may not come, he鈥檚 striving to remain confident and positive. He stressed that when dealing with individual members, some of whom only attend the gym for classes, Mountain Fitness looks to deal with each unique situation and they鈥檙e just looking to break even right now.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not about making money at this point. It鈥檚 just about being safe for the community to strive,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 have that, we just kind of fall apart.

鈥淚f we don鈥檛 uplift each other, we鈥檙e not going to survive this pandemic.鈥

Ground Up staff.
Ground Up staff. - Ellyn D'Uva

Making the climb

Lauren Watson of Ground Up Climbing Centre noted that she鈥檒l be able to continue to offer climbing with some additional restrictions.

鈥淐limbing is seen as a low risk sport when it comes to transmission; individual in nature and not cardio-based in most scenarios,鈥 she wrote in an email on Nov. 20. 鈥淭o make sure we were clear on the new rules, we shut down our youth and adult lessons over the past 10 days and started a dialogue with our public health official: filling out new checklists to ensure we complied.

鈥淲e have approval to now open them back up with some additional restrictions in place.鈥

Watson also introduced mandatory masks in early November, and has generally seen compliance, despite the discomfort of climbing while wearing one.

After reopening after 77 days closed in the spring, Watson has aimed for 鈥渙ver-communication鈥 in order to be as clear as possible about what鈥檚 expected, utilizing membership surveys, one-on-one dialogue and letters to communicate changes.

鈥淲e had to severely limit our capacity, increase our hygiene measures and create new engineering controls throughout the facility. Making the new policies was a collaborative process with our staff team. The new changes led to new challenges and frustrations, but that was to be expected,鈥 she wrote.

One major change is how Ground Up was once a major community hub for climbers, but the atmosphere has changed significantly with the new restrictions.

Still, for those with a love of climbing, Watson reasoned that gyms are a good place to go.

鈥淐limbing gyms are uniquely positioned to educate communities on both the risks and how to mitigate them,鈥 she wrote. 鈥淲e already do this through orientations and belay tests on a regular basis so this just became another aspect of our existent risk management plan.鈥

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