Rita Shalhope started the program when she and several neighbors in the area put in swimming pools.

“So I just went around to all the parents and said I’m afraid one of these kids is going to climb a fence and fall in, and I’m just going to teach all the kids to swim, which I did,” Rita told FOX 17 Thursday.

She would later adopt her more aggressive style of teaching after experiencing a personal tragedy.

“My son, I found him drowning in our pool at 3. He got through the gate, unlatched it. I was in the house and he fell in. By the grace of God I found him,” Rita said.

After that she realized the importance of teaching young children how to survive in and around water.

“A small child has to be able to get themselves to the side, they have to know how to go underwater because when they fall in their brain shuts down and nothing works,” Rita said.

But this week Rita received a letter from the city of Grandville asking her to stop giving lessons. They say her business, which operates as a home occupation, is in violation of city code.

“We’ve had complaints from a number of residents in the neighborhood that because of all the traffic, they can’t get mail, they can’t get garbage picked up, can’t get deliveries,” said Grandville assistant city manager Matthew Butts.

“So we’ve been trying to work with her for a number of years and this year it just ramped up and the neighbors have just had enough and complained to us and asked us to step in,” he said.

See FOX17

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Production engineer and certified swim coach. Full-time IT consultant, spare-time swimming aficionado. 2 sons, 2 daughters and a wife. President of the Faroe Islands Aquatics Federation. Likes to run :-)

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