Ridgway Record

A sand hole collapse in Florida killed a child. Such deaths occur several times a year in the US

- By Terry Spencer Associated Press

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — The collapse of a sand hole that killed a 7-year-old Indiana girl who was digging with her brother on a Florida beach is an underrecog­nized danger that kills and injures several children a year around the country.

Sloan Mattingly died Tuesday afternoon at Lauderdale­by-the-Sea's beach when a 4-to-5-footdeep (1-to-1.5-meter) hole collapsed on her and her 9-yearold brother, Maddox. The boy was buried up to his chest, but the girl was fully covered. Video taken by a bystander shows about 20 adults trying to dig her out using their hands and plastic pails, but the hole kept collapsing on itself.

Lauderdale-bythe-Sea, a small enclave north of Fort Lauderdale, does not have lifeguards at its beach, so there were no profession­als immediatel­y available to help. The first deputies arrived about four minutes after the collapse, with paramedics and firefighte­rs arriving moments later, according to 911 calls released by the Broward County Sheriff's Office on Wednesday. The sheriff's office originally said that Sloan was 5 and her brother 7.

Wails of anguish can be heard in the background of the emergency call as bystanders try futilely to rescue Sloan. Two of the callers identified themselves as registered nurses, but there was nothing they could do to help.

"There is a little girl buried under the sand and they have not got to her yet," one nurse told an operator.

Another woman who is weeping told the dispatcher, "There is a whole circle of men trying to dig, digging the sand."

Sandra King, spokespers­on for the Pompano Beach Fire-Rescue Department, said rescue crews took over for the bystanders, using shovels to dig out the sand and boards to stabilize the hole, but when they got to the girl she had no pulse. King said paramedics immediatel­y began resuscitat­ion efforts, but Sloan was pronounced dead at the hospital. The boy's condition has not been released.

King said the children's parents were extremely distraught and the paramedics who treated the children had to be relieved from their shift.

"It was a horrible, horrible scene. Just imagine one minute your children are playing in the sand and then in seconds you have a lifethreat­ening situation with your little girl buried," said King, whose department services Lauderdale­by-the-Sea.

News reports and a 2007 medical study show that about three to five children die in the United States each year when a sand hole they are digging at the beach, a park or at home collapses on top of them. Others are seriously injured and require CPR to survive.

Those who died include a 17-year-old boy who was buried at a North Carolina beach last year, a 13-year-old who was digging into a sand dune at a state park in Utah and an 18-year-old who was digging with his sister at a New Jersey beach. Those two accidents happened in 2022.

"The risk of this event is enormously deceptive because of its associatio­n with relaxed recreation­al settings not generally regarded as hazardous," the New England Journal of Medicine study concluded.

Lifeguards say parents need to be careful about letting their children dig at the beach and not let them get too deep.

Patrick Bafford, the lifeguard manager for Clearwater, Florida, said his staff will warn families if a hole gets too big but sometimes they aren't noticed in time.

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