END OF SCHOOL YEAR MEANS INCREASED CANAL DROWNING RISKS
The end of the school year for Treasure Valley students coupled with warmer weather
creates the environment for increased risks of canal drowning incidents, officials with the
valley’s largest irrigation district warned today.
“When school is out and kids and young people are home, our ditch riders typically start
to see more and more incidents of kids walking or playing along our entire system of some 500
miles of canals. From a safety standpoint, a canal bank is the last place in the world they
should be,” said John Anderson, water superintendent for the Nampa & Meridian Irrigation
District.
Statistics over the years show that an average of three young children will drown in
Idaho irrigation canals every year. Canal drowning also typically claims the life of young
people, teenagers, even adults every year in Idaho , including the Treasure Valley .
“Parents simply don’t grasp the fact that it only takes a matter of seconds for a young
child to fall into a canal and be swept away. We know of one case where a mother left her
young daughter alone in the back yard near a canal for less than two minutes while she went
to get a bag of potting soil. When she came back, her daughter was gone. Searchers finally
found the girl’s body almost two miles away,” Anderson said.
Still, every summer District employees encounter children and young people playing
along, tubing or even swimming in NMID canals. This despite an intensive annual campaign of
canal safety messages broadcast on radio and television by the District.
“Every time it happens, it just makes you want to find their parents, shake them and ask
why in the world they would risk the lives of their kids by letting them go anywhere near a
canal,” Anderson said. He figures the only explanation is that parents simply do not realize
the deadly danger posed by the cold, deep and swift flowing water in the canals.
“
Many of our employees, myself included, have had to deal with the trauma of recovering
the body of a drowning victim in our canals. During the summer we live a work life of constant
vigilance to do everything we can to prevent it from happening. But ultimately, it has to be
parents who make the difference,” Anderson added.
The Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District is a water storage, conveyance and distribution
system founded in 1904. The District supplies irrigation water to some 69,000 acres of
farmland and pressurized irrigation to more than 14,800 individual parcels of land in Ada and
Canyon counties. More information about the District is also available on its Internet website:
www.nmid.org.
For Media Information Contact: John Anderson - 466-0663