Texarkana Gazette

Duck boat survivor urges ban on such crafts

- By Ken Kusmer

INDIANAPOL­IS— An Indiana woman whose husband and three children died when a duck boat sank last month in Missouri said Tuesday she hopes to save lives by backing an effort to ban the amphibious tourist boats.

Tia Coleman, speaking through tears during a news conference in her Indianapol­is home, urged people to sign an online petition calling on federal officials to ban the boats.

Seventeen people died when the boat sank during a July 19 storm near Branson, Missouri, including 40-yearold Glenn Coleman, 9-yearold Reece, 7-year-old Evan and 1-year-old Arya. Five other Coleman relatives also died.

Family photos dotted the walls of the living room where she spoke, describing the silence she awakes to everyday, the children’s rooms still the way they were before the family vacation to Branson. Arya’s playpen filled with stuffed animals and toys is still in the living room.

“I never want another family to have to go through this, I never do,” Tia Coleman said. “It’s a house, now. It’s not a home anymore. … I’m trying to get used to an empty house.”

Two lawsuits have been filed on behalf of other Coleman relatives, but Tia Coleman is not yet a plaintiff. A lawsuit on her behalf is expected to be filed eventually.

Both lawsuits name Ripley Entertainm­ent Inc., Ride the Ducks Internatio­nal, Ride the Ducks of Branson, the Herschend Family Entertainm­ent Corp., and Amphibious Vehicle Manufactur­ing. They allege that the owners and operators of the Ride the Ducks boat put profits over people’s safety when they decided to put the boat on a lake despite severe weather warnings and design problems.

Ripley spokeswoma­n Suzanne Smagala-Potts has said the company remains “deeply saddened” by the accident but would not comment specifical­ly on the lawsuits because a National Transporta­tion Safety Board investigat­ion is ongoing and no conclusion­s have been reached.

She had no immediate comment Tuesday on Coleman’s petition.

Yelena Brackney, Coleman’s sister, sat beside her on a couch during the new conference. She said that in addition to the petition, the family supports legislatio­n introduced last month by Sen. Claire McCaskill of Missouri that would require duck boats to be better equipped to stay afloat or that canopies are removed to allow passengers to escape. McCaskill’s legislatio­n would enshrine recommenda­tions made by federal regulators after another duck boat sank in Arkansas in 1999, killing 13 people.

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