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    Boat-crash survivor, police-chief dad push for tougher water-safety laws
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    Charles Press remembers the words he said to his daughter just before she nearly lost her life in a boating accident last year: “Be careful. There are a lot of knuckleheads out there.”

    He grins as he recalls the day, Sept. 14, 2013. His daughter Danielle, then 25, waved him off and headed to the boat with her boyfriend Jeff Crease.

    “It was the perfect day,” she says.

    It was the young couple’s last chance to have a day on the water before taking off to teach English in Taiwan.

    “My friends, the weather, just everything,” Danielle Press says.

    But in seconds, her life changed.

    With the boat anchored in the Mashta Flats off Key Biscayne, Press 27 was in and out of the water all day. She decided to jump back in, recalling not wanting to wait for her boyfriend.

    She remembers seeing another boat, but not much else. As the boat backed up, she got caught in the propeller.

    “All I remember is sitting in a lot of blood,” says Press, who grew up on the water and still has a hard time understanding what happened that day. The propeller cut into the left side of her body, from ankle to chest, and separated her sciatic nerve.

    A year later, Press, who underwent the first of its kind nerve graft surgery using her own Schwann cells, is using her experience to try to help others — both on the medical side and in the boating community.

    Press and her father, the Key Biscayne police chief, are on a mission to toughen boating laws and make it safe to spend a day out on the water.

    Chief Press said the recent onslaught of accidents, including a deadly Fourth of July crash that killed four people and injured several others, “awoke the sleeping dragon.”

    “It’s like the wild west out there,” he said.

    As president of the Miami-Dade County Association of Police Chiefs, he has worked with the county mayor to form a task force to combat boating under the influence. He also has pushed for tougher county ordinances including limiting how many boats can tether together in the water.

    But he said the key is getting the state Legislature to toughen penalties for operating a boat while intoxicated and require anyone driving a boat to take classes.

    According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, 58 people have died so far this year in the state, eight in Miami-Dade. In 2013, 50 boating-related fatalities were recorded in Florida. In 2012, there were 61 deaths statewide.

    Jorge Pino, the spokesman for the wildlife agency, which monitors Florida’s waterways, said the problem is not getting worse — “it’s just getting more attention.”

    “The issue is not about passing more laws,” Pino said. “We have enough laws on the books to combat the problem we have. What it boils down to is personality responsibility. If boaters were to choose not to operate a vessel while intoxicated or operate a vessel carelessly or recklessly in an unsafe manner, we would not be in the situation we are in today.”

    The Presses agree but say education may help.

    Danielle Press, who graduated from the University of Florida in 2010 with an anthropology degree and spent time traveling the world, said getting harmed while boating was an impossible thought before her injury.

    “You never think that it could happen to you,” said Press, who is now speaking out about her accident and volunteering with the Monica Burguera Foundation. The foundation, which offers boating safety lessons, was created several years ago to remember 20-year-old Burguera, a Florida International Unievrsity student who was killed in a 2006 Columbus Day Weekend crash. Last year, 666 people took the class through the foundation.

    “We know us providing this class is making a difference,” said the foundation’s director of operations, Mari Novo. “We can’t bring Monica back but we are trying hard to prevent other families from having to go through what Monica’s family went through.”

    Novo said having Danielle Press share her story helps put a face to the problem.

    “We don’t want people to wait until there is an accident,” she said.

    For Danielle Press, the accident opened her eyes on how quickly life can change.

    While her plans to go to Taiwan have been temporarily derailed, Press said she will get there. But her recovery has not been easy.

    Press was rushed to Ryder Trauma Center where her dad was waiting. “There was blood everywhere and she was white as a sheep,” he said.

    The rest of the first few hours was a blur. “Herds” of medical staff went in and out and they kept pumping blood into his daughter.

    Press said a doctor asked him to go over to his daughter and talk to her. He remembers her opening her eyes and saying “I’m sorry, Daddy.”

    “I told her to shut up and tell me you love me,” he said.

    The doctor told him it didn’t look good. The propeller had destroyed a swath of her left side. Charles Press said the doctor “put her back together like Frankenstein.”

    When she finally came to, she really didn’t understand what had happened.

    So many things went through her mind.

    Would she be able to travel to different countries “roughing it,” hiking and living in the jungle?

    Would she be able to walk, run and exercise like she once did?

    Would she even make it out of the hospital?

    When doctors proposed doing a treatment that had never done before, she knew she had to go for it. She had no feeling in her leg and didn’t even know if she would be able to keep it.

    The surgery scared her and scarred her but she thought this was her best chance.

    Allan Levi, a University of Miami/Jackson neurosurgeon, said the surgery was the best chance to try to save her leg. There was a several-inch gap in her sciatic nerve, which controls most of the movement and sensation in the leg. Levi, through The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, was working on an approval to be able to use a patient’s own Schwann cells to treat paralysis.

    “I am very happy with her progress and would like to see even more,” he said. Levi said the science — which has been more than 25 years in the making — is a huge part, but Press’ “unwavering ability to stay positive,” helps.

    “Her fortitude and tenacity has helped in the recovery process,” he said. Levi said doctors are hoping this sort of treatment will soon be the cure for paralysis that they have been working so hard to find.

    “It’s promising,” he said.

    While Danielle Press has come a long way in just a year, success is still uncertain. Because the nerve grows so slowly it could take years before she regains any sensation below her knee. She has already had eight operations, and there may be more.

    But even without being able to feel her foot or wiggle her toes, she manages to keep going. She is back to her exercise routine. She plans on going to Canada with her boyfriend, and then to Taiwan.

    On her wrist, she now has a tattoo of a wave going into a lifeline to remind her of her ordeal.

    She fears leaving home, getting in the water, having a panic attack on a boat.

    Her father looks at his daughter in awe and knows she will be fine.

    “If she made it through that,” he said, “I know she can make it through anything.”

    Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/loca...#storylink=cpy
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    Founding Member / Super Moderator Ratickle's Avatar
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    I think there should be an endorsement on your drivers license for boating, just like a motorcycle endorsement.
    Getting bad advice is unfortunate, taking bad advice is a Serious matter!!
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    Georgia changed their law in 2013, but many think it did not go far enough.

    The Jake and Griffin Prince BUI Law is the portion of the bill that lowers the blood-alcohol content (BAC) limit to match the requirements for Georgia’s automobile drivers. Previously, Georgia was one of only eight states that allowed a higher BAC limit for boating than for driving.

    The Kile Glover Boat Education Law, is the portion of the bill that honors Tameka and Ryan Glover’s son, Kile, who was struck and killed by a jet watercraft last summer on Lake Lanier. The statute requires a boater safety education course for all motorized vessel operators born on or after Jan. 1, 1998, and it mandates that youths 13 years old and under wear life jackets on a moving boat.


    http://straightfromthea.com/2013/04/...on-law-photos/
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    Quote Originally Posted by Serious News View Post
    Charles Press remembers the words he said to his daughter just before she nearly lost her life in a boating accident last year: “Be careful. There are a lot of knuckleheads out there.”

    He grins as he recalls the day, Sept. 14, 2013. His daughter Danielle, then 25, waved him off and headed to the boat with her boyfriend Jeff Crease.

    “It was the perfect day,” she says.

    It was the young couple’s last chance to have a day on the water before taking off to teach English in Taiwan.

    “My friends, the weather, just everything,” Danielle Press says.

    But in seconds, her life changed.

    With the boat anchored in the Mashta Flats off Key Biscayne, Press 27 was in and out of the water all day. She decided to jump back in, recalling not wanting to wait for her boyfriend.

    She remembers seeing another boat, but not much else. As the boat backed up, she got caught in the propeller.

    “All I remember is sitting in a lot of blood,” says Press, who grew up on the water and still has a hard time understanding what happened that day. The propeller cut into the left side of her body, from ankle to chest, and separated her sciatic nerve.

    A year later, Press, who underwent the first of its kind nerve graft surgery using her own Schwann cells, is using her experience to try to help others — both on the medical side and in the boating community.

    Press and her father, the Key Biscayne police chief, are on a mission to toughen boating laws and make it safe to spend a day out on the water.

    Chief Press said the recent onslaught of accidents, including a deadly Fourth of July crash that killed four people and injured several others, “awoke the sleeping dragon.”

    “It’s like the wild west out there,” he said.

    As president of the Miami-Dade County Association of Police Chiefs, he has worked with the county mayor to form a task force to combat boating under the influence. He also has pushed for tougher county ordinances including limiting how many boats can tether together in the water.

    But he said the key is getting the state Legislature to toughen penalties for operating a boat while intoxicated and require anyone driving a boat to take classes.

    According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, 58 people have died so far this year in the state, eight in Miami-Dade. In 2013, 50 boating-related fatalities were recorded in Florida. In 2012, there were 61 deaths statewide.

    Jorge Pino, the spokesman for the wildlife agency, which monitors Florida’s waterways, said the problem is not getting worse — “it’s just getting more attention.”

    “The issue is not about passing more laws,” Pino said. “We have enough laws on the books to combat the problem we have. What it boils down to is personality responsibility. If boaters were to choose not to operate a vessel while intoxicated or operate a vessel carelessly or recklessly in an unsafe manner, we would not be in the situation we are in today.”

    The Presses agree but say education may help.

    Danielle Press, who graduated from the University of Florida in 2010 with an anthropology degree and spent time traveling the world, said getting harmed while boating was an impossible thought before her injury.

    “You never think that it could happen to you,” said Press, who is now speaking out about her accident and volunteering with the Monica Burguera Foundation. The foundation, which offers boating safety lessons, was created several years ago to remember 20-year-old Burguera, a Florida International Unievrsity student who was killed in a 2006 Columbus Day Weekend crash. Last year, 666 people took the class through the foundation.

    “We know us providing this class is making a difference,” said the foundation’s director of operations, Mari Novo. “We can’t bring Monica back but we are trying hard to prevent other families from having to go through what Monica’s family went through.”

    Novo said having Danielle Press share her story helps put a face to the problem.

    “We don’t want people to wait until there is an accident,” she said.

    For Danielle Press, the accident opened her eyes on how quickly life can change.

    While her plans to go to Taiwan have been temporarily derailed, Press said she will get there. But her recovery has not been easy.

    Press was rushed to Ryder Trauma Center where her dad was waiting. “There was blood everywhere and she was white as a sheep,” he said.

    The rest of the first few hours was a blur. “Herds” of medical staff went in and out and they kept pumping blood into his daughter.

    Press said a doctor asked him to go over to his daughter and talk to her. He remembers her opening her eyes and saying “I’m sorry, Daddy.”

    “I told her to shut up and tell me you love me,” he said.

    The doctor told him it didn’t look good. The propeller had destroyed a swath of her left side. Charles Press said the doctor “put her back together like Frankenstein.”

    When she finally came to, she really didn’t understand what had happened.

    So many things went through her mind.

    Would she be able to travel to different countries “roughing it,” hiking and living in the jungle?

    Would she be able to walk, run and exercise like she once did?

    Would she even make it out of the hospital?

    When doctors proposed doing a treatment that had never done before, she knew she had to go for it. She had no feeling in her leg and didn’t even know if she would be able to keep it.

    The surgery scared her and scarred her but she thought this was her best chance.

    Allan Levi, a University of Miami/Jackson neurosurgeon, said the surgery was the best chance to try to save her leg. There was a several-inch gap in her sciatic nerve, which controls most of the movement and sensation in the leg. Levi, through The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, was working on an approval to be able to use a patient’s own Schwann cells to treat paralysis.

    “I am very happy with her progress and would like to see even more,” he said. Levi said the science — which has been more than 25 years in the making — is a huge part, but Press’ “unwavering ability to stay positive,” helps.

    “Her fortitude and tenacity has helped in the recovery process,” he said. Levi said doctors are hoping this sort of treatment will soon be the cure for paralysis that they have been working so hard to find.

    “It’s promising,” he said.

    While Danielle Press has come a long way in just a year, success is still uncertain. Because the nerve grows so slowly it could take years before she regains any sensation below her knee. She has already had eight operations, and there may be more.

    But even without being able to feel her foot or wiggle her toes, she manages to keep going. She is back to her exercise routine. She plans on going to Canada with her boyfriend, and then to Taiwan.

    On her wrist, she now has a tattoo of a wave going into a lifeline to remind her of her ordeal.

    She fears leaving home, getting in the water, having a panic attack on a boat.

    Her father looks at his daughter in awe and knows she will be fine.

    “If she made it through that,” he said, “I know she can make it through anything.”

    Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/news/loca...#storylink=cpy
    Ok. I read all that, and I am left wondering what happened. Danielle Press was backed into? Why? By who? Were they breaking a law? Were they drunk? Had they taken a safety course?
    What happened (in addition to her choice to jump in the water at that moment) that contributed to the accident and could have been prevented by a safety course?
    Would it been prevented by a law limited the number of rafted boats?

    Safety is very important to each of us and our loved ones. I fail to see how existing or proposed legislation would have saved Danielle Press from her accident. Maybe I am missing something. Is there a law against jumping off a boat that is anchored? That would have prevented the accident?

    Boating, like driving, will never be completely "safe" no matter how much additional legislation we pile on.
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    #5
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    She declines to say if the boater was drinking according to the news articles.

    http://www.wsvn.com/story/26388297/o...e-on-labor-day
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