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Heat Safety Outreach Campaign Launched

A new community service campaign to inform the public about the dangers of heat-related issues has been launched by the Auburn University Staff Council.

“Beat the Heat, Check the Back Seat” is the brainchild of College of Veterinary Medicine employees Hollie Lee and Sharron Barney, who serve on the Auburn University Staff Council’s Health and Wellness Committee.

Through their work, and members of AU’s Staff Council, the group has gotten support of university and community officials and received a small grant from the AU Concessions Board. They have launched a Facebook Page, “Beat the Heat Check the Backseat”, and have printed vehicle decals to remind people of the serious issue.

The decals can be picked up for free at the Auburn University Bookstore and the chambers of commerce in Auburn and Opelika.

“The purpose is to save lives of children and animals, which are especially vulnerable in overheating vehicles,” said Lee, who was moved by an incident she witnessed.

Lee said the idea started following a trip to a local business, where she witnessed a dog, who was locked inside a car, in distress. “While the windows of the car was cracked, you could tell the dog was in distress, and there was no one around,” she said. “I went inside the business but I also called the police.

“Luckily, the owners came out of the store and the dog was fine.”

But the incident got Lee to thinking about what could happen, and she and Barney started brainstorming what they could do, and got the AU Staff Council interested in taking action.

The council enlisted the support of the AU Office of Public Safety and Security as well as Lee County Sheriff Jay Jones.

“The national Weather Service indicated that heatstroke in vehicles accounts for 61% of non- crash-related fatalities involving children 14 and younger,” Chance Corbett and Susan McCallister, AU public safety and security officials wrote in the support letter. “These tragic deaths are preventable.”

Sheriff Jay Jones agreed, writing, “Protecting people, particularly children, and pets by ensuring they are not subject to the extreme heat in a vehicle on a southern summer day should be a key concern of everyone.”

“We want to tell the Auburn University family and ask for their help to tell the community and public,” Lee said.

The council advocates four steps for the public to follow if they see a situation:

  • Record information about the vehicle
  • Alert the management of the business
  • Call 911
  • Stay with the vehicle until police arrive

They caution, however, to not take matters into your own hand. “Safe bystander intervention is what we are recommending,” Lee added.

Short URL: http://caninechronicle.com/?p=78857

Posted by on May 26 2015. Filed under Featured, Health & Training. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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