Medicine Hat News

Paralympia­n wins lawsuit over swimming accident

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REGINA The lawyer for a Paralympia­n says his client is relieved to have won a lawsuit over the swimming accident that left her quadripleg­ic.

A jury decided late Friday evening that the University of Regina is to blame for Miranda Biletski’s accident and has awarded her $9.1 million.

Her lawyer, Alan McIntyre, says Biletski is pleased that the jury decided the university is at fault, and not Biletski herself or the swim club, which rented the pool.

“It was such an emotional moment ... because the university has always blamed her. They say it’s her fault, so this was such a relief for her,” McIntyre said in an interview with The Canadian Press on Saturday.

Biletski can move her arms and shoulders, but has limited hand use.

McIntyre said the award should be enough to cover Biletski’s care for the rest of her life.

“That’s completely the point and that’s what the jury got,” he said.

Biletski dove into a pool from competitio­n starting blocks at the university during a swim club practice in June 2005. The then-16-year-old hit the bottom and fractured her cervical vertebrae, leaving her quadripleg­ic.

McIntyre had argued during the trial that the pool was unsafe. That’s why the university had a policy about no dives off the lip, he said.

Court heard that the pool depth of four feet or 1.22 metres was laid out in the tiles.

But at issue was whether there was enough water in the pool. Court heard that the person responsibl­e for pool maintenanc­e only added water one time in two months leading up to Biletski’s accident.

The university’s lawyer, Erin Kleisinger, said in her final submission­s that the pool depth and the height of the starting blocks met Swimming Canada guidelines.

Kleisinger said Biletski “did a bad dive” and it was “clearly a tragic accident.”

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