The Province

RCMP confirm trampoline park death

46-year-old lay injured while staff checked in customers: witnesses

- NICK EAGLAND, STEPHANIE IP AND JOANNE LEE-YOUNG neagland@postmedia.com jlee-young@postmedia.com sip@postmedia.com

Witnesses to a horrific fatal accident at a trampoline park Saturday in Richmond say they were left shocked by inadequate safety measures at the business.

Jay Greenwood, 46, died following a fatal injury he sustained Saturday during a fall at the Extreme Air Park at 14380 Triangle Rd. He was playing at the park with his two young daughters at the time. His sister Adrienne confirmed his death on Facebook, posting a photo of Greenwood with one of his girls.

B.C. Emergency Health Services received a call about the fall at 7:14 p.m. and dispatched two ambulances, with the first arriving nine minutes later, spokeswoma­n Amy Robertson said. Greenwood was transporte­d in critical condition.

Richmond RCMP arrived at the park shortly before 8 p.m., according to a media release. Before Greenwood died, he “was allegedly performing a series of acrobatic manoeuvres prior to a fall that caused serious injury and cardiac arrest,” Cpl. Dennis Hwang said. Mounties are investigat­ing. West Vancouver resident Charlie Bouzakis was at the park with his daughter, girlfriend and girlfriend’s son when Greenwood fell.

“(There was) no supervisio­n whatsoever, no instructio­n prior to going in, nothing,” Bouzakis said. “It wasn’t very comfortabl­e because kids were jumping on top of kids, kids were staying in the pits. It was just pure chaos.”

Bouzakis said he noticed Greenwood playing with his daughters and they acknowledg­ed one another. Later, his daughter alerted him when she saw one of Greenwood’s girls at the park’s front desk, pleading for help from a staff member.

“His daughter’s at the front desk screaming and crying, ‘My dad’s stuck and he’s not breathing,’ and the front-desk attendant said, ‘One moment. I’m just checking in these customers. I’ll be with you after that,’” Bouzakis said.

Bouzakis said when staff didn’t respond immediatel­y, he went to check on Greenwood, who was not moving. Children continued to play nearby with no staff in sight.

“I’m screaming, ‘Did anyone call 911? What’s going on?’ I jumped into the pit. I run there and everyone’s still there. I pull him up, he’s down there, completely blue-white face,” Bouzakis said.

As they waited for paramedics, staff allowed children to remain in the area where Greenwood lay, and continued to check in new customers, Bouzakis said. He said it seems as though there was no protocol in place to handle the emergency.

“Something should’ve been in place to say, there is something seriously wrong going on. Everyone clear the area. We need to address this. We are closed temporaril­y until further notice,” he said. “That place needs to have a first-aid attendant on site, period.”

Vanessa Vermaas, 35, of Vancouver was checking into the park Saturday with her sister and four friends when they found Greenwood’s elder daughter pleading with staff.

“I guess she’d been trying to get their attention for quite a while and they weren’t listening to her,” she said.

Vermaas said her group called 911 before escorting children away from the foam pit where Greenwood had apparently sustained a “severe neck injury.” They asked staff to turn off video monitors in the waiting area that were broadcasti­ng images of the injured man.

She said she felt bad for the trampoline park’s three staff, who appeared to be in their teens or early 20s and seemed woefully unprepared to respond to such an injury. One staffer told Vermaas that none of them had first-aid training.

Two older men, apparently owners or managers, arrived later when customers were giving police their statements, Vermaas said. One tried to rearrange the foam pit where Greenwood had fallen, but was stopped by paramedics, she said.

Vermaas said she sat with Greenwood’s elder daughter until grandparen­ts came to pick both girls up.

“This girl was just so confident her dad was going to be OK,” Vermaas said. “She showed an immense amount of courage because it was just so traumatizi­ng … You’re told as a kid, if you need something, call 911 and ask for help. She was begging for help and nobody helped.”

Extreme Air Park released an unsigned, emailed statement Wednesday, saying: “As a family entertainm­ent company whose highest priority is the safety of its customers, we are devastated by this incident and our thoughts and prayers are with the family involved. At this time we are doing everything we can to assist the authoritie­s and agencies that are looking into this matter.”

 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP/PNG ?? Richmond RCMP are investigat­ing after a man died following a fall at Extreme Air Park.
ARLEN REDEKOP/PNG Richmond RCMP are investigat­ing after a man died following a fall at Extreme Air Park.
 ?? — FACEBOOK ?? JAY GREENWOOD
— FACEBOOK JAY GREENWOOD

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