Local authorities have been told to consider deferring rents and offering interest-free loans to leisure operators which are struggling with the COVID-19 shutdowns.
The Local Government Association (LGA) is advising councils to help their leisure partners during the pandemic, to avoid "long-term damage" to the services they provide.
"Leisure facilities provide vital health, leisure and wellbeing services to local communities and will be a key re-engagement service for those communities post the COVID-19 pandemic," the LGA said in a statement.
"However, leisure providers are currently falling between the cracks of most announced support packages. Leisure trusts are most at risk because they are charities, societies or community interest companies (with a public benefit asset lock) and as such do not distribute profits."
The LGA has published a comprehensive guide, titled Options for councils in supporting leisure providers through COVID-19, which outlines several measures local councils can introduce to assist contractors and operators.
These include waiving the money that leisure providers are due to pay the council every month and offering interest-free loans or grants to cover the closure period - as well as concessions on future measures when allowed to re-open.
It is clear that services dellivered by leisure providers play a vital role in this both now and in the future," LGA states in the guidance.
"We would encourage councils the long-term implications of these unprecedented times on the culture and leisure sector as a whole and consider how we can best stand together to ensure the resillience of these facilities for our residents."
The LGA worked with industry body ukactive in pulling the guidance together.
"Partnerships between local authorities and their leisure operators have never been more important, with each facing huge financial pressures as a result of the Coronavirus pandemic," said Steven Scales, ukactive's Client Services Director.
"Let there be no doubt; every city and town is facing the loss of vital community leisure facilities which are crucial for the physical, mental and social health of their residents. Our leisure centres are the places where our children learn to swim, our communities gather to meet, and our family and friends recover from injury or illness - we cannot let them disappear. "
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