A spokesperson for Surrey County Council said: “We have a number of schools that have requested an assessment and unfortunately we have to undertake these during school term times to get an accurate picture of road user behaviour in the vicinity of the school.
Aside from this, a £1m temporary car park was also established at the site on Bishop’s Road and £275,000 was also spent in response to Legionella bacteria outbreaks last year.In the last decade, the figures showed £723,349 was invested into the pool.
A further £355,430 was spent on maintenance and repairs and £328,434 on inspections and testing in this period.The average annual cost of maintenance and repairs has doubled - from an average of £26,000 a year in 2015 to an average of £57,000 in the last three financial years.The council said it would cost them £26.3m to repair the facility which was built in the 1970s.
However, it is estimated a new pool could cost £30m with demolition costs expecting to reach up to £2.5mThe council said this cost would be offset by how much the value of the land the pool’s built on increases and how much it will save on security and monitoring.
Leader of the council, Mohammed Farooq said demolition work might take "a few months" to get under way.
The authority has pledged a new £30m pool for the city, scheduled to be completed by 2028.Dignity in Dying said the campaign used "positive imagery" and was fully compliant with the Committee of Advertising Practice code. Transport for London said the adverts were compliant with its advertising policy.
for England and Wales on Friday.Some of the posters on the network have been covered by posters for the Samaritans. The organisation said it had not sanctioned this.
A spokesperson for Dignity in Dying said its advertising campaign, Let Us Choose, featured real people who wanted a change in the law on assisted dying, either because they were terminally ill and wanted the choice, or because their loved one wanted the choice but had been denied it."The campaign uses positive imagery of these people living life on their own terms, alongside messages about why they are campaigning for greater choice," the spokesperson said.