<Ul> <Li> Arena: These clubs have their own equipment including rocks (either owned by the club or leased) and play at a facility where other ice sports are played on the same ice surface . An example would be a club that rents ice time at a hockey rink . </Li> <Li> Dedicated: A club that owns / leases its own facility with ice that is only used for curling . The buildings usually include a clubhouse with kitchen, locker rooms, etc . </Li> <Li> Paper: An active club of the USCA that at present has no place to play . An arena club that loses its lease at its ice rink becomes a paper club until it finds new ice . A newly formed club that has not yet found a facility is also considered a paper club . </Li> <Li> Inactive: A club that has gone dormant but still retains USCA membership through a few people who hope to restart the club at a later time . </Li> <Li> Forming: A brand - new club that has not yet gained membership in the USCA . These groups are typically people trying to gather enough interested parties to form a new club . They often communicate through a social networking site such as Facebook or they have their own web sites . </Li> </Ul> <Li> Arena: These clubs have their own equipment including rocks (either owned by the club or leased) and play at a facility where other ice sports are played on the same ice surface . An example would be a club that rents ice time at a hockey rink . </Li> <Li> Dedicated: A club that owns / leases its own facility with ice that is only used for curling . The buildings usually include a clubhouse with kitchen, locker rooms, etc . </Li> <Li> Paper: An active club of the USCA that at present has no place to play . An arena club that loses its lease at its ice rink becomes a paper club until it finds new ice . A newly formed club that has not yet found a facility is also considered a paper club . </Li>

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