pasayten wrote: Thu Oct 12, 2023 10:37 pm
October 12th post... A little confusing as a vote on Prop 1 is not actually to approve a "levy" to create a recreation district. Campaign Manager? Should know more facts about Prop 1 and RCW 35.61 Metropolitan Park Districts. We all want a pool... Just build one without an MPD... There are plenty of other options.
Friends of the Pool - Twisp
The Wagner pool, as some of you may not know, has a very tragic story of beginnings. The story of the loss of a child due to drowning. I’ve asked myself many times this last year, why is safe swimming important to me… As a former ER nurse, I have bore witness to, and tried to save, more than one child drowning victim. I am still haunted by the cries of their parents. I’m not asking you to approve this levy to build an indoor pool, I’m asking you to approve this levy to create a recreation district that will ensure what I consider a basic human right. The right to learn to safely swim in water. When you decide to vote in November, please don’t just think about yourselves and your children (who may now know how to safely swim), think about the future children and families of the Methow Valley. You can help to protect their lives and prevent tragedies by ensuring public access to safe, monitored swimming.
Kellie Zahn
Campaign Manager for Proposition 1
I'm sharing a picture of my autistic kiddo learning to swim in our community pool. Please be kind with your comments and remember that we are your community members, your friends, and we are parents trying to protect the children and citizens of the Methow Valley.
If we didn't have any swimming options in the Methow (Which we always will), there is still a pool in Omak where children can learn to swim. Seniors have to drive to Omak for specialized medical care, like a colonoscopy, so why would it be so hard for parents to drive children to Omak to learn how to swim?
Im saying, I don't buy the argument that we need a 21 million dollar pool ( not including 5 milloin for the land) that operates at a $500,000 per year deficit to save children from drowning. Teaching a child how to swim is the parents responsibility.
https://www.stopdrowningnow.org/drownin ... es%201%2D4.
"Twenty-three percent of child drownings happen during a family gathering near a pool."
"Children younger than one-year-old are more likely to drown at home."
"Eighty-seven percent of drowning fatalities happen in home pools or hot tubs for children younger than 5. Most take place in pools owned by family or friends."
"Thankfully, adults can play a crucial role in protecting the children they love from drowning."
"Close supervision is required when kids are in or near water (including bathtubs), at all times. Drowning happens quickly and quietly, so adults watching kids in or near water should avoid distracting activities like playing cards, reading books, talking on the phone and using alcohol or drugs."
https://www.a3performance.com/blogs/a3- ... an%20drown.
"SO, WHY DO GOOD SWIMMERS DROWN?
Swimmers can drown because they areoverconfident in their abilities
Strong swimmers are less likely to be supervised, which increases their chances of drowning
Experienced swimmers are more likely to take risks when involved in water-based activities
Open water also poses a variety of dangers that often lead to drowning
Specific drowning reasons in the above categories – read below to find out more "
I should add that my closest. encounters with drowning happened while trying to jump a wave on my windsurfer when it was blowing 55mph in the Columbia Gorge.
I jumped on a day when I should not have been jumping waves. As I was jumping the sail back winded and the Mast hit me on the head hard enough to see flashing stars. I passed out for just a moment and landed in the water.
What saved my life was; I wore a helmet with a full face guard similar to a football helmet. I also wore a flotation vest which allowed me to swim back to my board, which was quickly getting further away, in a stargazing dazed state of mind.
Prior to that I fell off a concrete Bulkhead into the water when I was 3 years old. That might be my oldest memory of looking up and seeing a hand reaching towards me and pulling me up out of the water. I fell in the water right next to a guy in a rowboat, but my parents were right there so they would have been able to pull me out of the water if the boat man hadn't done that first.
In both cases I had the proper safety backup.