Albuquerque Journal

Summertime turns cars into death chambers

- CRIME AND JUSTICE Diane Dimond www.DianeDimon­d.com; e-mail to Diane@DianeDimon­d.com.

Why does this keep happening? Surely people know by now how dangerous it is to leave a child in the car in the summertime! It is deadly dangerous, yet it keeps happening year after year.

Consider this my annual reminder to never – ever – leave a child alone in an enclosed vehicle, no matter the time of year. Children are especially vulnerable to heat stroke. As their internal temperatur­e rises their little hearts beat faster which, in turn, diverts blood from their lungs, brains and other internal organs. The result? A painful headache and excruciati­ng spasms of arms and legs. It is a terrible death.

Experts say if it’s 93 degrees outside, the interior of a car can quickly reach 147 degrees. Imagine trying to catch your breath in a small space that is that hot. Now imagine that there is no way to escape because someone you trusted either forgot you were there or deliberate­ly left you there to, as one pot-smoking young mother of two put it, “to teach them a lesson.” Both of her daughters died while she took a long nap inside.

Since 1990, more than 800 kids have died in hot cars. Some were the result of terrible accidents, others because of criminal neglect. So far this year, according to NoHeatStro­ke. com at least 29 young souls have been lost in this torturous way. The toll will likely go higher as medical examiners release their findings on other suspicious children’s deaths. Cases in 2017 show the tragedies are nationwide:

IN PORTALES,

a day care worker left two toddlers strapped into their car seats after having had lunch at a nearby park. About an hour and a half later she returned to the car to retrieve something and discovered her mistake. One of the babies was dead. As I write this the other remains in critical condition.

IN CALDWELL, IDAHO,

a working mother left her 5-month-old girl with her boyfriend for the day. He left the infant inside his enclosed car while he signed papers to buy a new vehicle. He says he lost track of time while the baby baked to death in the sun.

IN KERRVILLE, TEXAS,

a teenage mother decided hanging out with a 16-year-old male was more interestin­g than caring for her two daughters, ages 1 and 2. Police say she intentiona­lly left them in the car for more than 15 hours. A grand jury will decide if Amanda Hawkins, 19, is charged with murder.

IN CHATTANOOG­A, TENN.,

a father left his three children in a blazingly hot car while he went to work. When he yelled for help with his 11-month-old daughter in the parking lot and a passer-by responded, he “tossed” the lifeless, naked baby to the Good Samaritan and sped away. Travis McCullough was arrested for criminal homicide and child neglect.

Texas holds the dubious distinctio­n of being the leading state for hot car deaths of children. And earlier this month, outside Austin another dependent person, a 48-yearold developmen­tally disabled woman, went missing from her care facility and was found dead in a hot van outside. When or how she got there is unknown.

And let’s not forget our pets. The American Veterinari­an Medical Associatio­n says hundreds of pets die from heat exhaustion every year. It’s faulty thinking to believe your pet will be OK if left in the car for “just a few minutes” or that “cracking the window” makes it OK. Sadly, at least three police K-9 dogs have died so far this year when their officer/handlers left them in their vehicles.

The news will surely get worse because, traditiona­lly, July, August and September are the deadliest months for hot car deaths of children. But they have happened in every single month of the year, including January. It doesn’t necessaril­y have to be hovering in the 90s outside for it to be triple digits inside a car.

I’m sorry to say there’s not a lot that can be done about negligent or criminally inclined parents until something horrible happens. But there is something that can be done to help frazzled parents who simply – and honestly – forget their child is strapped into the back seat of their car. It’s called the Hot Cars Act of 2017 which would require all new cars to include an alarm that alerts a departing driver if a passenger remains in the back seat.

“Our cars can already alert drivers when they leave their keys in the car, their lights on, or their trunk open – none of which are life threatenin­g,” U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, said. “And cars are mandated to have seat belts, interior trunk-releases and rear backup cameras,” he said. So why can’t this inexpensiv­e technology be included?

The answer is – it can be – and it is already available on a few new cars. Write your representa­tives in Washington and urge them to get behind this important legislatio­n. Innocent lives depend on it.

 ?? CATHRYN CUNNINGHAM/JOURNAL ??
CATHRYN CUNNINGHAM/JOURNAL
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