Lawsuit highlights safety
- Share via
I would just like to say that I hope you are never in a situation
like my family and I have been in for the last 4 1/2 years.
The death of a child, especially one who was murdered, goes beyond
anything anyone could ever imagine. The grief, pain, heartache,
wondering and emptiness is often unbearable and very difficult to
describe. I still have to get up every morning and go on with my day,
getting my two other children ready for school. I go to my full-time,
8 a.m. to 5 p.m., five-day-a-week job, and go home to take care of
dinner, laundry and everything else before going to bed for another
restless, sleepless night. When I wake, I do it all over again. It is
not easy. But I do it.
For the Daily Pilot to judge us in the editorial “It’s time for
tragedy to end” because of a lawsuit that we filed is not fair. And
for the paper to not have its facts straight is appalling.
As for Flo Martin, the author of a Community Commentary on the
same subject; just because it is not “her style” to file a lawsuit
doesn’t mean that the lawsuit we have filed, knowing the true facts
of this case, is frivolous or without merit. If she would like to
know the facts of this case and the reasoning behind the pursuit of
this lawsuit, a simple phone call to us, our lawyer, the police
department or public files at the Santa Ana Superior Court might
change her mind. And if she thinks the school had advised the parents
of previous accidents breeching the fence, that the playground did
not have the proper conditional use permits or the motivation behind
this playground was not money motivated on their part, she’s wrong.
The church and preschool should be held accountable since there
had been a previous accident at the same site a few years before. Had
the playground been in the courtyard or a safer barrier been
installed, the children would not have been as visible or such easy
targets as they were that horrible day. This lawsuit is, as Cindy
Soto Beckett, Sierra’s mother, stated in the last article, “to draw
attention to the issue of safety in preschools and to set a
precedent, that someone will see this as a warning signal to make a
change that will make them more accountable.”
The only things in the editorial that were “good points” were the
mentioning of The Brandon Cody Wiener Scholarship Fund and Sierra’s
Light Foundation. Both Cindy and I have put our hearts and souls into
making a positive out of a negative. It is very hard work and very
time consuming but we are both very dedicated to our causes. And yes,
I am all for a Brandon and Sierra Law, and just to add another tidbit
of information, I am in collaboration with The Center for Grief and
Loss for Children, which has locations in Glendale, Pasadena and
South Los Angeles. And I will be opening The Brandon Cody Wiener
Costa Mesa Chapter of the Center for Grief and Loss for Children
later this year.
PAMELA WIENER
Costa Mesa
* Pamela Wiener is the mother of Brandon Wiener, one of the two
children killed at the Southcoast Early Learning Childhood Center.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.