Scholarships raise ESD awareness as summer swimming season begins

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With the arrival of summer, the efforts to honor the legacy of two boys from the Lakeway Area and promote awareness of Electric Shock Drowning continue.

In July of 2012, Noah Dean Winstead, 10, and Nate Lynam, 11 died in Cherokee Lake of Electic Shock Drowning. They encountered an electric current while swimming off a dock in the lake.

As part of the effort to rasie awarness, Nate’s mother, Jessica Mills McClure, Electric Shock Drowning Board Vice-President, recently awarded the Electric Shock Drowning scholarships to Morristown East and Morristown West students.

Applicants were asked to write about ESD, how it happens, and how to know the risks.

Requirements for the scholarship also include students to research and explain the Noah Dean and Nate Act which was passed in 2014 to help reduce ESD and make Tennessee lake waters safer.

Recipients from West High were Bode Watkins, Halie Clary, Zoe Kraus and Lauren Gray. East High recipients were Rebecca McDermott, Ethan Bean, Krista Jolly, and Karina Laureano Ruiz

Each summer, to help keep Tennesseans safe while on the water, the Tennessee State Fire Marshal’s Office reminds consumers to learn more about potential hazards that could lead to electric shock drowning.

To reduce the risk of electric shock drowning deaths in Tennessee, the Tennessee General Assembly passed the Noah Dean and Nate Act, which requires that all of Tennessee’s public marinas and docks be inspected by the SFMO.

As part of the legislation, marina and boat dock operators must comply with equipment requirements preventing possible electrical shocks and electrocution.

To help boaters and swimmers avoid electric shock drowning incidents, the SFMO created this video to highlight the importance of safety when visiting a dock or marina.

As a reminder for families and boat owners, the SFMO shares these tips to help avoid electric shock drowning.

• Never swim within 100 yards of any freshwater marina or boatyard.

I* f you own a boat, have your boat tested once a year to see if it is leaking electricity, or buy a clamp meter and test it yourself.

• If you find any problems, have your boat inspected by a qualified electrician trained to American Boat and Yacht Council (ABYC) standards. Have a qualified ABYC electrician install an Equipment Leakage Circuit Interrupter (ELCI) on your boat or use an ELCI in the shore power cord. As an alternative, install an isolation transformer on the boat.

• Test the ELCI at least once a month or per the manufacturer’s specifications.

• Never use common household extension cords for providing shore power to your boat. Use, and encourage other boaters to use, shore power cords built to Underwriters Laboratories (UL) standards.

• Never dive on your boat to work on underwater fittings when the boat is plugged in to shore power.

• If you’re in the water and feel tingling or shocks, do not follow your instinct to swim toward the dock. Instead, swim away 100 yards or more away from the dock.

• If you feel tingling in the water, let everyone around you know what is occurring so they will understand the danger and react appropriately.

• Once ashore, alert the dock or marina owner and tell them to shut the power off to the dock until they locate the problem and correct it.

• If you must rescue an electric shock drowning victim, fight the instinct to enter the water. Many rescuers have died trying to help electric shock drowning victims.

• Call for help. Use 9-1-1 or VHF Channel 16 as appropriate.

• Turn off the shore power connection at the meter base and/or unplug shore power cords.

• Get the victim out of the water.

• If the person is not breathing or you cannot find a pulse, perform CPR until the emergency responders arrive.

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