Keller ISD’s swimmers have been tossed into the deep end of a maintenance mess after the district’s natatorium abruptly closed on Tuesday when a filtration failure left the indoor pool unsafe. The shutdown halted high school and club practices, wiped out lessons and, in the eyes of many families, exposed what they say are years of deferred upkeep. Trustees responded at a May 14 meeting by approving roughly $2.1 million in emergency repairs and upgrades, with district leaders warning that immediate parts and systems could run into the hundreds of thousands and that costly HVAC and air quality work could drive the total far higher.
According to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, the board backed a budget amendment of about $2.1 million to cover new pool filters and related equipment. The outlet reported that the new filtration unit alone is estimated at roughly $357,000, while a specialized air-filtration and dehumidification project could top $1.6 million. District officials told the paper they expect parts to take two to three months to arrive, followed by roughly 10 to 14 days of installation once everything is on site.
Community Impact reports that KISD notified user groups that the facility at 1000 Bear Creek Parkway was closed on Tuesday because of maintenance concerns, and the board packet listed an action item to spend the amended funds on new pool filters and dehumidification units. Keller ISD describes the natatorium, which opened in 2003 with a 186-by-75-foot competition pool, as a hub for school teams, lessons and club programs.
Clubs Scramble As Lanes Vanish
SwimSwam reported that Lakeside Aquatic Club and other user groups rely on the natatorium for hundreds of athletes, and that neighborhood Facebook groups quickly filled with complaints about long-standing air quality and maintenance issues. Parents and club organizers told the outlet they are racing to secure temporary pool time for practices and lessons, with some already worrying about disrupted summer meets and recruiting. The social media backlash has turned up the heat on both the district and the city to find short-term alternatives.
Parents Turn Up The Pressure
Families who showed up at the May 14 board meeting said the closure wrecked the team’s final practice week and accused officials of waiting too long to fix problems they viewed as obvious. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported that students described months of complaints about the building’s air quality, while parents demanded a clearer, more proactive maintenance plan going forward…