Glasgow Times

Charity slams lifebelt vandals for ‘putting lives at risk’ on River Clyde

- BY STACEY MULLEN Crime Reporter

GLASGOW Humane Society has hit out at lifebelt vandals who are putting lives at risk at the city’s Clydeside.

The charity took to the social media website Facebook on Friday after volunteers retrieved 30 lifebelts that had been thrown in the water.

There were a further nine lifebelts the organisati­on could not retrieve due to the tide.

There are around 600 lifebelts on the River Clyde from Carmyle to Yoker. Those lifebelts are funded by Glasgow City Council.

The organisati­on said: “Answers to the problem perhaps lie with the public, the vandals who throw the lifebelts into the water; the people who take the lifebelts to hang up on their house walls; the people who see the vandals throw the lifebelts into the water and do not report it - there must be people witness this.”

The statement continued: “Day after day both Glasgow Humane Society and the city council are trying to combat this vandalism.

“Roughly 1000 times a year lifebelts are being thrown into the river. Fortunatel­y we retrieve most of them.

“Unfortunat­ely when the council used to attach ropes to the lifebelts some were thrown in with the lifebelts, but most were taken away, stolen if you like, we had to give up putting ropes on the lifebelts.

“Much of the signage we put up cannot be read because of graffiti or stickers.

“Glasgow is miles ahead of most cities regarding water safety provision – though we can never be complacent and can always learn from others and incorporat­e new ideas; but there has to be an answer to the vandalism.

“We try to have establishm­ents next to the river keep lifebelts and ropes inside their premises where they will not be vandalised, many establishm­ents do so but not all are 24/7.

“So we are back to the situation where we have to ask, what is wrong with people that have to throw a lifebelt into the water every time they walk past it.

“Vandalism ruins safety plans, vandalism costs lives.

“Hours are spent every day retrieving lifebelts.

“It could be their mother, their wee brother in the water needing a lifebelt. Many people suffer the consequenc­es when the lifebelt that should be there to throw to someone in distress is not – the consequenc­es of a drowning and the sadness of living without a loved one.

“The bottom line is that no matter what we put in place to prevent drownings, these items are prone to vandalism.

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“Glasgow Humane Society does not know the answer to this wanton vandalism but we pray that it will stop soon.”

The Glasgow Humane Society is a unique charity set up in 1790 after merchant James Coulter left £200 in his will to found a Humane Society in the city.

The object of the society was “to recover those who are apparently dead, from having been sometime under water, from being exposed to intense cold, or to other causes capable of suspending life without destroying it”.

 ??  ?? Donzens of lifebelts were retrieved after being thrown in the water
Donzens of lifebelts were retrieved after being thrown in the water

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