Ask any Como resident older than 30 and they鈥檒l probably tell you that the Como pool was more than just a pool 鈥 and Brandney McCormick was more than just a pool manager.
In the 20 years McCormick spent managing Como鈥檚 pool, hundreds of children (including his own) learned to swim, dozens of community members found employment as lifeguards, and the manager provided mentorship, fun and even food to generations of residents.
鈥淭he pool was so important,鈥 McCormick said. Several times, parents entrusted him and his lifeguards to watch their children through the summer months. Eventually, he formed a swim team, traveling around the region to competitions which created a fun and safe space for neighborhood kids to spend their summer.
Today, instead of a summer oasis, the Como pool is a concrete slab covered with a new playground. When it closed in 2014, McCormick was still managing the pool; he was crushed by the news.
鈥淚t meant so much to the community,鈥 McCormick said. 鈥淚 was shocked that they put concrete down (over) something that had meant so much to the community.鈥
Fort Worth is not unique from other cities that experienced a . However, many cities have recently reinvested in aquatics as an increase in drowning deaths The example other cities have set by consistently investing in pools with equity in mind could chart a path for Fort Worth to reinvest and recover some or all of the pools it has lost.

In 2014, Fort Worth permanently closed five of its seven pools, including Como鈥檚, all of which were located in primarily Black or Hispanic, low-income neighborhoods. The move was dictated by the city鈥檚 , which found that each of the city鈥檚 now-closed pools was losing about $30,000 annually. Maintaining the pools each season cost the city hundreds of thousands of dollars annually.
Which five pools closed:
- Sylvania Park Pool
- Sycamore Park Pool
- Lake Como Park
- Kellis Park Pool
- 鈥嬧婬illside Park Pool
鈥淯se of the pools was lagging,鈥 Joel McElhany, assistant director of the city鈥檚 parks and recreation department, said.
To date, the city has declined to build its own aquatics facilities and instead opted to seek partnerships with the YMCA and school districts, a decision McElhany attributes to a lack of excitement for new pools at public meetings.
The tide is changing though, he said, as the city is currently working to and in the majority-Black and Hispanic Stop Six neighborhood.
The parks and recreation department is already primed for change. The city is in the process of developing both a new parks and recreation master plan and a . Both documents will guide Fort Worth鈥檚 effort to maintain, and possibly build, more aquatic facilities.
Fort Worth鈥檚 pool history mirrors other cities
The city has significantly fewer pools than its similarly-sized counterparts in Texas and around the country. Many cities with fewer residents have more public pools. But why? Scholars say the answer can be , which led to white residents leaving integrated public pools and flocking to their own de-facto whites-only pools in neighborhoods and private clubs.
How many pools are in other major cities
Dallas with a population of 1,343,565: 17 pools
Austin with a population of 979,263: 33 pools
El Paso with a population of 681,729: 14 pools
Arlington with a population of 398,860: 8 pools
Fort Worth with a population of 913,656: 2 pools
This manifestation of white flight led city governments around the country to devalue public pools, often allowing them to deteriorate before closing. After integration was mandated by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1954鈥檚 Brown v. Board of Education, cities chose to close pools rather than allow them to be integrated. In Mississippi, half of the public pools open in 1961 .
Hispanic residents also suffered under segregation, and many of them were also denied access to pools. One of the first successful desegregation lawsuits in the U.S. was filed in 1944 against San Bernardino, California, where Hispanic children were not given equal access to the city鈥檚 pools.
News clips documented the day Como鈥檚 pool was dedicated by the city of Fort Worth as a segregated pool in 1958, two years after Black residents and the NAACP the city鈥檚 parks and recreation department to integrate Fort Worth鈥檚 six municipal pools.
The city鈥檚 pools were not integrated until the 1970s.
Nearly a decade after Fort Worth鈥檚 pools were integrated, the city began to periodically close them, including in the 1980s, when budget cuts caused their closure.
The city plans to include the neighborhoods with private pools in its new aquatic master plan to ensure the city is building pools in communities that lack those options, McElhany said.
Fort Worth鈥檚 Polytechnic Heights neighborhood, which used to house Sycamore Park Pool, illustrates the impact of racial segregation on the health of communities, TCU historian Cecilia Sanchez Hill said. Initially a majority white neighborhood, the neighborhood has since transitioned to a majority Black neighborhood and then a majority Hispanic neighborhood, according to the
鈥淲hen that community becomes majority Black, you do see a disinvestment of city services,鈥 Sanchez Hill said. 鈥淲hen you have a community that鈥檚 lost that access to that power structure, then you have less opportunities to bring money into it and bring city funds into your community.鈥
鈥楢 plan with no money means nothing鈥
Fort Worth can look to Baltimore as an example of a city invested in pools. As a result of a in Baltimore, a ripple of white residents fled public pools for private ones.
Despite this history, today Baltimore maintains 23 public aquatics facilities. Many are more than 50 years old, and all are in the process of replacement or revitalization. This year, when residents complained about the forced closure of a public pool, the city was able to answer with a 10-year plan to replace every public pool with a brand new facility.
Baltimore is using state money and its capital improvements program, a fund set aside to build new public buildings and parks, to improve its parks and recreation infrastructure.
鈥淎 plan with no money means nothing,鈥 said Reginald Moore, director of Baltimore Parks and Recreation.
Both Fort Worth and Dallas primarily use their bond programs, which voters approve every four years, to fund new pools and expand existing ones. Bonds are a form of debt that allows cities to spend large amounts of money to build new facilities like roads, parks and pools. Dallas takes a similar approach to Baltimore to maintain its 17 aquatic facilities and sets aside money in nearly every bond program for aquatics.

From 2004 to 2018, Fort Worth did not invest any money from its bond program into aquatics. However, in 2014 and 2018, the parks and recreation department started asking for funding to build two new pools. Each year, the request was denied because the council said residents at public input meetings didn鈥檛 mention pools as a high priority.
Finally, in 2022, pools made it into the bond program, McElhany said. Ever since, there鈥檚 been a shift in how vocal residents are about the need for new pools.
鈥淭here was enough support in 2022 and it really hasn鈥檛 gone away,鈥 McElhany said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been an ongoing issue for residents.鈥
To encourage the city to keep investing in pools, residents need to keep speaking up, McElhany said. The city will begin a round of public engagement meetings for the parks and recreation master plan in October, immediately followed by public meetings for the aquatics master plan. Those meetings are expected to kick off in June 2024.
Moore鈥檚 advice? Lean on your master plans and use them as a form of accountability to continue investing in the department鈥檚 priorities. Create a plan and then put the money in place to get it done. When the loudest voices are the only ones the city is listening to, you start to leave residents out, he said.
At first McCormick dreaded working in the Como neighborhood. But when Viola Pitts, the unofficial mayor of Como, recruited him to re-open the neighborhood鈥檚 pool after it closed in the 1980s, he had a change of heart.
He had experience running swimming programs in his hometown of Birmingham, Alabama. In Como, McCormick found a community that went above and beyond to support his work at the pool. The neighborhood daycares and schools bused kids to the pool so their students could learn to swim under his watchful eye.
Since retiring from the pool and teaching at William Monnig Middle School, McCormick has time to walk every morning. He鈥檚 lost 100 pounds and his heart rate has slowed. Despite this, if the city reinvested in aquatics and reopened the pool, he would happily report for work to manage the pool again.
鈥淚f they built another pool and needed a manager, I would be the first one to run to Como,鈥 McCormick said.
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