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Jan 042012
 

MESA, AZ (CBS5) –

ZERO drownings is the goal as Cardon Children’s Medical Center partners with firefighters throughout Arizona to launch the 2012 Walk for Water Safety campaign.

Several fire departments and safety organizations from around the state, from Yuma to Sun City West, are participating in the 2012 Walk for Water Safety to educate the community about drowning prevention and work towards a common goal of ZERO drowning’s in 2012. They will be targeting 60,000 homes to distribute information about drowning prevention.

State wide fire departments and other local safety organizations are seeking volunteers to pick up and distribute Water Safety information packets. They are asking volunteers to distribute the packets throughout their neighborhoods on March 31, 2012. Volunteers can pick up as many Water Safety packets as they would like.

Volunteers will be able to pick up the information packets at their local fire departments. There is a list of participating fire departments at http://www.bannerhealth.com/CardonChildrensWaterWalk.

Jan 042012
 

Cardon Children’s Medical Center has partnered with several community partners to bring you our 2012 Walk for Water Safety campaign.

We are uniting to educate the community about drowning prevention to work toward a common goal: ZERO drownings in 2012. We are targeting 60,000 homes to distribute information about drowning prevention.

How you can help

Communities throughout Arizona are seeking volunteers to pick up Water Safety information and distribute it throughout their neighborhoods on March 31, 2012. You can pick up as many as you like. For more information, contact a fire department below or talk to Injury Prevention Coordinator Tracey Fejt at (480) 412-3306.

Arizona Fire Departments: See list of participating fire departments and other organizations for a location near you:

  • Apache Junction: Tina Gerola, (480) 982-4440
    565 N. Idaho Road, Apache Junction, AZ 85119
  • Avondale: Sue Pistoia, (623) 333-6112
  • Casa Grande
  • Chandler: Brad Miller, (480) 782-2136
  • Florence: Bill Bruin, (520) 868-7609
  • Gilbert: Jean Machnicki, (480) 503-6325
  • Glendale: Janet Boberg, jboberg@glendaleaz.com
  • Goodyear: Tanja Tanner, (623) 882-7308
  • Maricopa: Brad Pitassi, (520) 251-3888
  • Mesa: Michele Long, (480) 644-2294
    Station 211, 2130 N. Horne, Mesa, AZ 85203
  • Peoria: Tim Eiden, (623) 773-7919
  • Phoenix
  • Queen Creek: Ron Knight, ron.knight@queencreek.org
  • San Tan Valley/Fountain Hills: Mark Cichocki, (480) 540-8802
  • Scottsdale: Lori Schmidt (480) 312-1817
    Lou Witzeman Public Safety Building, 8401 E. Indian School Road, Scottsdale, AZ 85251
  • Southwest Ambulance, a Rural/Metro Corporation Company: John Ford, john.ford@metro.com
  • Sun City West: Hollie Sandeen, (623) 215-1058
  • Tempe: (480) 858-7230
  • Tucson SafeKids: (520) 324-2783, safekidstucson@tmcaz.com
  • Yuma Safekids: Ryan Butcher, (928) 317-4667, ryan.butcher@yumacountyaz.gov
Jan 042012
 

GREEN VALLEY, Ariz. — Southern Arizona authorities say a Tucson woman has been arrested on suspicion of trying to drown her 7-year-old son in a bathtub.

The Green Valley News reports 30-year-old Corina Rodriguez was booked into the Pima County Detention Center Thursday.

Sahuarita police say they responded to information provided by Child Protective Services, and made the arrest Thursday afternoon.

It couldn’t be immediately determined if Rodriguez has an attorney.

Jan 042012
 

MESA, Ariz. — It’s the official kick-off to swimming season in the Valley.

On Tuesday, more than 1,000 1st graders attended the 13th Annual Water Safety Day at Mesa Community College. The event was put on by Water Watchers at Phoenix Children’s Hospital with the support of several fire departments, volunteers and businesses.

The goal of the event was to teach children the importance of water safety. Child drownings are a big problem in Valley, and officials want to stop the preventable deaths. Last year, 17 children drowned in the valley. That number is down from 2010, which saw 20 drownings.

Water Watchers, a non-profit organization, continues to bring awareness and education about child drownings through direct children’s education, community educational efforts, media efforts and support of other drowning-prevention groups.

Water Watchers was started by Druann Letter whose son died in 1998. Baby Weston drowned in his family’s swimming pool while both of the parents were at home.

“We thought we had everything covered, but we didn’t. We didn’t watch him with eye-to-eye contact and that’s one of the most important layers of … water safety,” she said.

Trying to pull something positive from her family’s tragedy, Letter began Water Watchers because she said the drowning is a killer that knows no boundaries and a little bit of knowledge can keep families from going through what her family has experienced.

Letter also wants people to understand that drowning often steals kids silently. Children can slip under the water with little or no splashing sounds and they often do not have the chance to cry or yell for help.

Child-safety experts and Water Watchers stress the importance of what they call the ABCs of water safety, with adult supervision being the most important. There’s nothing that can substitute for eyes-on contact with children, especially in situations that can quickly turn tragic.

A – Adult supervision
When it comes to keeping kids safe around water, the most important thing is adult supervision. Adults should have eye-to-eye contact with kids at all times.

B – Barriers
While there is no substitute for adult supervision, fences and locking gates can go a long way in keeping kids out of the swimming pool.

C – Classes
Not only should children take swimming lessons (although lessons in no way replace supervision), adults should be trained in CPR in case the unthinkable should happen.

To learn more about the Phoenix Children’s Water Watchers program, call 602-546-1712 or visit PhoenixChildrens.com.

Dec 282011
 

A baby died Friday after drowning in a bathtub in Mesa.

Mesa fire officials said the 6-month-old girl was in a bath chair with her 2-year-old brother in their Western Sun Apartment, which is in the area of Broadway and Gilbert roads.

Mesa Police Sgt. Ed Wessing said the mother had left the bathroom for a couple of minutes and returned to find the baby floating face down in the tub.

Paramedics were called around 11:15 a.m.

The child was treated by Mesa fire crews and transported by ambulance to Cardon Children’s Hospital where she was pronounced dead.

Neighbors said the mother was too upset to even leave the hospital hours after the child’s death.

Dec 282011
 

An 18-month-old child fell into a Scottsdale pool Sunday and was transported to Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center.

Scottsdale police arrived at a home near Hayden Road and Via De Ventura about 3 p.m. A child was pulled from the pool, police said. The child was conscious by the time police and the Fire Department arrived.

The child was taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, police said.

Dec 282011
 

A young boy is in critical condition after being found at the bottom of a pool with his scooter in Phoenix, authorities said.

Glendale Fire Department officials said the boy, who is believed to be 2 or 3 years old, was found by his mother Friday afternoon at a home near 43rd Avenue and Greenway Road.

The mother jumped in and pulled the boy out, and the grandpa started CPR, officials said.

The boy was taken to a hospital with no pulse or respiration, but officials said he did have a heartbeat. Upon arrival to the hospital, the boy started breathing, officials said.

There was no safety fence surrounding the pool.

Dec 282011
 

A 17-year-old boy was taken to the hospital in critical condition Thursday after being found unconscious in his family’s pool.

The teen apparently was cleaning the pool at his family home in the 2100 block of West Lupine Avenue early in the afternoon and was operating a pump when the incident occurred.

Phoenix Department spokesman Scott McDonald said the pool only had about 2 feet of water in the deepest end, where the man was found floating face-down. He was taken to John C. Lincoln hospital.

“We’re not entirely sure if he drowned or if he was electrocuted,” McDonald said.

Dec 282011
 

When Derek Frechette took his two young boys to a town recreation program four summers ago, he made sure to bring their life jackets, which they had worn whenever they went swimming.
Christian Frechette died at age 4.

But as he was leaving, he recalled, a staff member told him children were not allowed to swim in life jackets at the lake.

It is an assertion the town disputes. But whatever the reason, 4-year-old Christian Frechette was not wearing a life jacket when he entered the water.

A few hours later, a police officer appeared at the Frechettes’ home. One of the boys had been in an accident, he said.

At the hospital, the doctor confirmed their worst fears. Christian had drowned, found in just 3 feet of water.

Driven by the death of his son, Derek Frechette is pushing for legislation, known as Christian’s Law, that would require state and town-run camps with a swimming area to have Coast Guard-approved flotation devices on hand for all minors.

“So no one else has to say “リWhy me?’ ” Frechette said. “This is preventable.”

The legislation is now before the Senate Ways and Means Committee. “Considering what kind of impact it would have, I think it’s a logical effort,” said Stephen Brewer, the state senator sponsoring the bill.

Brewer, whose brother also drowned at the age of 4, said the prevalence of child drownings, and their “searing impact” on families, justifies the expense.

Frechette said he has devoted long hours to the cause, and said it has given him renewed purpose that eases a measure of his grief.

“There’s still a hole,” he said. “But I am trying to make his death mean something. All I want is to know that my son didn’t die in vain.”

After Christian died, Frechette was inconsolable. He drank heavily, and lost interest in work. As grief gnawed at him, he become more isolated, pushing away even his closest friends. He often dreamed that Christian was calling to him from the water.

Time didn’t seem to help. He lost his job in 2008, and increasingly turned to drinking as a way to escape his troubles. His marriage strained under the pressure, and twice he moved out of the house.

“You wind up blaming each other,” Frechette said.

But he and his wife, Tina, worked things through and had two more children. Eight months ago, Frechette gave up drinking.

“I saw the way my son [10-year-old Cameron] looked at me,” he said. “I decided that was enough.”

Frechette regularly attends Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, and has renewed his relationship with God after years of bitterness over Christian’s death. He is doing more work as an engineering consultant and has stepped up his efforts to pass the law. He said he has worked with water safety groups such as Safe Kids USA to provide life jackets to local camps, publicized the bill through social media and his foundation’s website, and recently shared his story in an article for Water Safety Magazine called “Preventable Pain.”

“No more self-pity, I guess,” he said.

How Christian drowned remains a mystery. Some of the other children in the program were having lunch in a picnic area near the lake when he went missing, but staffers quickly started looking for him. They first looked in the woods, but then a child told a lifeguard she had felt something on her foot when she was in the water. His body was found near a dock that extended past the designated swimming area.

The Frechettes have thought about the possibilities countless times. Maybe Christian was pushed, or maybe he lost his balance on the narrow walkway. But over time, they have stopped searching for answers.

“We’ll never know what happened,” Tina Frechette said.

Christian had spent lots of time in the water, but always wore a life jacket, they said.

The state’s recreation department declined to take a position on the plan, but said anyone may wear Coast Guard-approved flotation devices at its waterfronts.

Lynne Girouard, the recreation coordinator in Sturbridge, said that while children can wear life jackets at the lake, she doesn’t believe they are appropriate for shallow water.

“A life jacket isn’t for swimming,” she said. “A life jacket is for boating.”

But the Red Cross, which runs the campaign “Life Jackets Aren’t Just for Boats,” said young children and inexperienced swimmers should wear life jackets in the water, even in swimming pools.

“Unfortunately, many people think water wings replace life jackets, but that’s very far from the truth,” said Don Lauritzen, a spokesman for the American Red Cross. “They provide a false sense of security.”
Sturbridge10/25/11-Derek Frechette’s son Christian drowned at the StuDerek Frechette held a flotation vest similar to the one he said his son Christian was told he couldn’t wear the day he drowned.

Derek Frechette held a flotation vest similar to the one he said his son Christian was told he couldn’t wear the day he drowned.

In the Frechettes’ home, Cameron sleeps in a room he used to share with his younger brother. He still cries over him, though less than he used to. “When he sees two brothers together,” said Tina Frechette, “it makes him remember what he had.”

The home is filled with pictures of Christian, and his bike still hangs in the garage. His urn rests on the mantle. On his birthday, the family goes to the preschool he attended and releases balloons. The children think they will make it to heaven.

“That’s what they think balloons are for,” Tina said.

The playground at the school was built in Christian’s memory. A dedication says it was the “result of the love brought to this world by a little boy who was taken away too soon.”

At the lake where Christian drowned, the dock is gone, and a life jacket station has been built. On a recent visit, Derek Frechette stood on the beach, watching the sunlight shimmer on the water. He took a large gulp of crisp fall air, then sighed.

“Why?” he asked. “It’s hard to understand why.”

Dec 282011
 

KINGMAN – The Mohave County Attorney’s Office is reviewing the case of a baby who drowned while in the care of a foster parent to determine if the death merits criminal negligence charges.

The baby, identified by the Sheriff’s Office as 8-month-old David Whatahomigie, was in the care of Hualapai foster parents. They are not being named by the Miner at this time because charges have not been filed. The couple have two children, ages 12 and 13, and were also caring for a 3-year-old they were seeking custody of at the time of the drowning.

According to the Sheriff’s Office’s incident report, the foster mother told authorities she drew a bath in her Valle Vista home for the 3-year-old and the 8-month-old around 1 p.m. Sept. 25. The baby was a little fussy once in the water, she said, so she went to go retrieve a towel from a hall closet just outside the bathroom.

She said that while she was getting a towel, the phone rang and she went to the bedroom to answer it. At the same time, her fiance came home and she greeted him before they returned to the bathroom and found the infant face down in the bathtub.

According to the report, the foster mother estimated she had been out of the bathroom for three to five minutes. That time frame was corroborated by an older child watching television in the living room at the time.

The parents pulled the baby out of the water and began resuscitation efforts until the ambulance arrived a few minutes later.

The foster mother said the water in the bathtub, which was drained by the parents as the baby was discovered, came up to the children’s belly buttons, which investigators determined to be around 8 to 10 inches. The foster father told authorities he believed the water level was closer to four inches.

The woman had been a foster mother for the Hualapai tribe for more than five years before she was suspended by the tribe following the incident. According to tribal social services officials, she was current on all her training to be a foster parent and had completed the required 60 hours required by the tribe.

The County Attorney’s Office said it does not have a time line on when a decision will be made on possible charges.