Loving Dedication
River Falls
honors beloved coach Heather Joy Wilson with
renovated swimming pool.
By
Alex Scofield/The Almanac
June 28, 2006
Missions Accomplished
Heather Joy Wilson grew
up in River Falls and
swam on the River Falls
swim team, and later was
an assistant coach
there. She died at the
age of 33 after a long
battle with multiple
illnesses.
Her family launched the
Heather Joy Wilson
Memorial Fund after her
death, and supported
projects at
organizations that
Heather was especially
supportive of. Four of
the five projects have
been completed, and will
contribute to the
furnishing of a
renovated dining room
and living area at the
Cabin John Park
Volunteer Fire
Department’s Station 30
on River Road.
For more information
about Heather Wilson and
the memorial fund’s
projects, visit
www.TheHeatherJoyWilsonMemorialFund.com

Photo by Alex Scofield/The
Almanac
A plaque at the entrance
to the newly renovated
River Falls swimming
pool honors former coach
Heather Joy Wilson, who
died in 2003 at the age
of 33.
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Melissa Attilio wasn’t surprised when three
swimmers set pool records in the first half of
the summer’s first "A" swim meet at River Falls
on Saturday, June 24.
The 30-year-old River Falls pool was renovated
in the past year and dedicated on Memorial Day
weekend last month. Attilio expects more pool
records will fall in the upcoming months.
"We went from having one of the slowest pools in
the county to one of the fastest, which I think
will help our swimmers mentally as well as
physically," she said. "After coming off a tough
season, we have a fresh start."
THE FIRST FEATURE a visitor will notice upon
entering the new River Falls pool is its
dedication to Heather Joy Wilson. A River Falls
swimmer and later an assistant coach, Wilson
died after a long battle with multiple illnesses
in December 2003 at the age of 33.
A new plaque at the pool’s entryway features a
picture of Heather with the inscription, "You
taught so many of us to swim, all of us how to
take each day one at a time, and everyone to
enjoy life to the fullest."
"It’s hard to put into words how incredible it
is to see her when we walk in and out of here,"
said Attilio, an assistant coach at River Falls
and a friend of Wilson’s.
The plaque was unveiled at the dedication
ceremony last month, and was financed by
donations from generations of River Falls
residents who knew and loved Wilson.
"Kids gave babysitting money. … People who
hadn’t lived in the neighborhood for years came
back," said Gary Thompson, a River Falls parent.
"It was everybody kind of coming together on it.
… That was the way to give a long-lasting
tribute."
"We are deeply appreciative that the community
chose to remember Heather in this special way,"
said Walter Wilson, Heather’s father, who
attended the meet on Saturday.
THE ORIGINAL River Falls pool was more than 30
years old, and was leaking from several broken
drains in the deep end.
"We wanted to design a pool that the whole
community could use at all times," said Joe
Schiattareggia, a board member at River Falls.
Macon Construction and Paddock Pools were the
two primary contractors who built the new pool
in the past year.
New features of the River Falls pool include a
"zero-degree" wheelchair ramp access, as well as
a chair that can lower swimmers with
disabilities into the pool. There are now eight
swimming lanes instead of six, meaning that the
swim team can practice while non-team members
can continue swimming. The filter building is
new, and the deck area was enlarged.
"The whole thing is new. The old pool was dug
up, brought down to dirt and mud, then started
from scratch," Thompson said. "Everything’s
state-of-the-art."
The pool will eventually be heated, although
that feature is not yet completed.
George Milne, an engineer and River Falls
parent, served as a neighborhood consultant for
the renovation project. "I think this one’s
going to last a long time," he said.
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