New bill could help save lives
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Assemblyman Tom Harman is looking to beef up the training of
lifeguards throughout California.
He is pushing a bill that would require lifeguard training across
the state to meet a more stringent set of standards, set by the
United States Lifesaving Assn. The bill is sponsored by the Newport
Beach Lifeguard Assn.
As it is now, the state has set no mandated training standards or
regulations for lifeguards on minimum training received or equipment
used.
While training is top-notch in many of our coastal cities, such as
Laguna Beach, that same level is not the standard across the board.
Training is not even the same for lifeguards from one end of the city
to the other. Some stretches are operated and maintained by the city
while the rest is controlled by the state. Does that make it safer to
swim from one block to the next? It shouldn’t.
That’s what makes Harman’s idea a solid one. Anyone living here
should be able to know they can travel anywhere up and down the coast
and find the same knowledgeable care.
Sadly, there will be a different number of lifeguards watching
from city to city and beach to beach. State beaches like Aliso are
perilously low on lifeguards because of the state’s budget crisis and
some question whether there are enough lifeguards to watch the rest
of Laguna. The state Department of Beaches and Parks therefore is
asking swimmers and beachgoers to take extra care -- which they
always should.
There will be fewer lifeguards on duty -- and for less time --
each year with all the cutbacks, so swimmers need to take extra
caution and beachgoers who do not know how to swim should not go in
the water when there is no lifeguard present.
But during the height of summer, when all the towers are manned,
beachgoers should be secure in the fact that California -- all the
city and state beaches -- have expertly-trained lifeguards watching
over them.
Harman’s bill would help guarantee that, which makes it a plan
well worth backing.
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