Safe kids starts life
jacket loaner program
Posted: Tuesday, Apr 29,
2008 - 10:01:53 am PDT
By Chrystal Doucette
Herald staff writer
|
GRANT COUNTY - Swimmers and boaters throughout Grant County are getting access to life jackets for children through a new loaner program.
Grant County Health
District coalition Safe
Kids Grant County worked
to start a loaner
program at eight
locations where
drownings or near-drownings
are most frequent. The
program is funded by
Paul Lauzier Charitable
Foundation.
"We
looked at our drowning
data, and we looked at
areas in Grant County
that had a higher rate
than others," said Safe
Kids Coordinator Theresa
Fuller.
So
far, stations are
installed at Sunland
Estates, Blue Lake,
Billy Clapp Lake and
Connelly Park. They will
also be available in two
locations at Steamboat
Rock, at Potholes
Reservoir and at Coulee
City Park.
At
a press event Monday,
the coalition, Grant
County Sheriff's Office
Marine Deputy Jon Melvin
and couple Paul and
Deanna White showcased
the new station at
Sunland Estates, located
near Wanapum Dam.
Melvin said the
sheriff's office is
going to be responsible
for checking on the
station.
Seattle residents Paul
and Deanna White
supported the
installation of the
stations, moved by the
July 14, 2005, death of
their 2-year-old
daughter Paris.
"We
didn't want anyone else
to have to go through
what we had to go
through," Deanna White
said.
The
couple's daughter was
following her brother,
then 4 years old, to
their grandmother's home
on the same property as
their home. Paris
stopped following him,
but he did not know. She
drowned in the family
pool.
"She'd only been out of
sight five minutes, if
that," Deanna White
said.
She
said they knew they
could not change what
people did in their back
yards.
"We
had to find a wa y that
we could help save
lives, and we love the
water, we love to boat,
and we thought this was
a way we could help save
some lives," she said.
The
couple met Melvin at a
Washington State
Drowning Prevention
Network meeting. They
learned a life jacket
loaner program was being
planned in Grant County,
where they travel
regularly for boating.
"You have no idea how
excited I am about it,"
Paul White said.
Paul White said he and
Deanna have pushed for
the addition of kiosks
in their own city and
county, for more than
two years. They are
still working toward
that goal.
Paul and Deanna White
used funds from a
foundation they
established in their
daughter's name, Paris
White Foundation, to
purchase several life
jackets for the
stations. Any jackets
that go missing will be
replaced through the
foundation.
Melvin said the
sheriff's office became
involved and contacted
Kittitas County, which
had a similar program in
place the past few
years.
"We'd had an
opportunity to talk with
them and find out it
does work," Melvin said.
The
county indicated theft
was not a major issue,
and people donate their
children's old life
jackets to the program
when they outgrow them.
Since 1990, there have
been 66 drownings in
Grant County related to
recreation, Melvin said.
"Of
those 66, only two of
them were wearing life
jackets," he said.
There were no drownings
in Grant County in 2007,
according to Fuller.
In
addition to being
cautious when boating,
Melvin advised parents
to be cautious with
small children near
canal systems. He said
the water is swift,
there are undertows and
undercurrents, rebar may
be exposed, and banks
are slippery.
To
purchase a wristband
benefiting the Paris
White Foundation, visit
http://pariswhite.com.