Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Park Board Tells Free Yoga Group To Get A Permit If Classes Continue

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 May, 2017 12:00 PM
    Vancouver residents hoping to hone their downward dogs and warrior poses among fellow yogis have run afoul of city regulations at a green space known locally as Dude Chilling Park.
     
    The city's park board has hamstrung free yoga classes organized twice daily throughout the summer by the Dude Chilling Park Yoga Collective, at least for now.
     
    Solomon Montijo, who founded the collective about five years ago, said Friday he was frustrated after city officials warned him the week before that he and other instructors would be fined if they were caught teaching in what is officially known as Guelph Park.
     
    "We have been operating in a legal grey area with the city for the past years and have now been informed that we are not going to be allowed to offer classes as we have been at the park," Montijo said in a Facebook post.
     
    "It is very sad to all of us and we will miss practising with you!"
     
    A non-profit group must pay $15 per hour for a private recreation permit, which for the yoga collective would amount to about $200 a week and $3,600 from May to September.
     
    Montijo said the group, which hosts classes by donation, doesn't have the money to afford a permit so he has to cancel the program indefinitely.
     
    "We're looking for someone to work for us as a fundraiser. Once that's settled up, then we can apply for permits," he said in a private Facebook message.
     
    The Vancouver Park Board said it was approached by someone with questions about the yoga classes, otherwise it wouldn't have known about them.
     
    Board chair Michael Wiebe said he wasn't aware of the details of the complaint, but it's not uncommon for people to notify the board when there are disputes over using park space, leading staff to look into the matter.
     
    He said permits are required to be fair and keep groups organized so that space is guaranteed for everyone. Small groups of people taking part in the occasional sports game don't need permits, but when the gathering becomes large and scheduled regularly like a league, a permit is necessary.
     
     
     
    But Wiebe said the permitting process isn't intended to stop the yoga class, especially over financial reasons.
     
    "We've told the organizer that he can work with our staff on looking at ways if it's not financially feasible for his group to find different payment structures that will work," he said.
     
    A number of businesses have also contacted Wiebe, he said, offering to offset the financial costs for the yoga group if it's a barrier to the classes continuing.
     
    Speaking on background, a spokeswoman said the park board works with 315 organizations every year that purchase permits, including six yoga organizations. The $15 hourly rate covers liability and goes toward maintaining the park system, which includes cutting the grass and keeping washrooms open, she said.
     
    Julie Peters, who owns Ocean and Crow Yoga, said that from a business perspective, free yoga classes in the park pose a challenge for established yoga studios, especially in the summer when people prefer to be outdoors.
     
    She said she supports how free sessions improve access to yoga, but she is also concerned about safety and had contacted the city with concerns about the group.
     
    "I'm not sure people really know … how much training really does go into being able to teach people yoga safely, especially if they do have issues that they're coming in with."
     
    Sue Horning has run Unity Yoga for 12 years and agreed that free outdoor classes undermine businesses that have high overhead costs throughout the entire year.
     
    But Horning doesn't see the classes as the issue.
     
    "The greater issue is the rent on yoga spaces," she said, adding that it seems ridiculous to put a fee on people using parks.
     
    "I think that we just have to allow people to use public parks in any way they see fit," she added. "We shouldn't regulate what's happening in a park. It's a park because it's a public place for people to do what they please."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Search Continues For Two Men Missing On BC's Cypress Mountain

    Search Continues For Two Men Missing On BC's Cypress Mountain
    VANCOUVER — North Shore Rescue says the search for two men who have gone missing while snowshoeing near Cypress Mountain is particularly challenging because crews don't know what route they took.

    Search Continues For Two Men Missing On BC's Cypress Mountain

    2 killed, 38 injured in train derailment in northern India near Kanpur

    2 killed, 38 injured in train derailment in northern India near Kanpur
    At least 43 passengers are injured as 15 coaches of the Ajmer-Sealdah Express derailed early morning on Wednesday in Uttar Pradesh, an official said.

    2 killed, 38 injured in train derailment in northern India near Kanpur

    Calgary Sikh Gurdwara Vandalized With Swastikas And Profanity

    Calgary Sikh Gurdwara Vandalized With Swastikas And Profanity
    A gurdwara in Canada has been spray-painted with “racist” graffiti and profanity by some unidentified persons, prompting the police to probe the incident as a hate crime, a media report said.

    Calgary Sikh Gurdwara Vandalized With Swastikas And Profanity

    Dalbir Kaur, Sister Of Sarabjit Singh, Joins BJP

    Dalbir Kaur, Sister Of Sarabjit Singh, Joins BJP
    Dalbir Kaur, the sister of Sarabjit Singh, who died in a Pakistan jail in 2013, today joined the Bharatiya Janta Party or the BJP.

    Dalbir Kaur, Sister Of Sarabjit Singh, Joins BJP

    Three Canadian Teachers Nominated For Global Teaching Innovation Prize

    Three Canadian Teachers Nominated For Global Teaching Innovation Prize
    The nominees were selected from over 20,000 applications from 179 countries

    Three Canadian Teachers Nominated For Global Teaching Innovation Prize

    CRTC's ‘Basic service' Internet Decision Welcomed By Indigenous Group

    CRTC's ‘Basic service' Internet Decision Welcomed By Indigenous Group
    As grand chief of an organization representing northern Manitoba First Nations, Sheila North Wilson has a lot of experience dealing with spotty Internet and cell phone service.

    CRTC's ‘Basic service' Internet Decision Welcomed By Indigenous Group