Rhode Island
Dangerous waters – RI bays and beach breaks, pools and ponds, are death scenes this summer
Conimicut Point Beach ripe tide warning system
Conimicut Point Beach machine alerts those nearby about the perilous riptides. The machine was installed after the drowning of a 10-year-old girl.
WARWICK – As tiny waves slosh onto the sandy spit at Conimicut Point, a loud siren interferes with nature’s soundtrack.
Emergency lights flash from a warning system mounted to the top of a pole. After the piercing siren, which has a klaxon-like rhythm, an authoritative voice commands the attention of anyone on the point.
“Attention!” it says. “Attention!”
“Dangerous tidal and current conditions are approaching! You are advised to leave the sandbar immediately!”
The warning system at Conimicut Point, which includes the same cautions in Spanish, is a new feature that arrived in time for the 2024 swimming season.
Time will tell if the gadgetry makes a major impact on safety over the long term by raising awareness of the point’s hazards, deterring risky behavior and substantially reducing or even eliminating drownings and other water-related fatalities.
So far, the swimming season at Conimicut has been safer this year, with no fatalities or serious injuries, according to Warwick’s police chief, Col. Brad Connor.
Unfortunately, there are lots of other ways for people to put themselves at risk in the water in Rhode Island, from backyard pools to high cliffs along Narragansett Bay, to Atlantic Ocean rip currents.
The state has not avoided tragedy this summer.
Double fatality in Omega Pond believed to be accidental
The deaths of two kayakers on Omega Pond in East Providence drew widespread attention as the news broke on July 5.
The bodies of Joseph Fritz, 52, of East Providence, and Gregory Boerman, 37, of Allston, Massachusetts, were found submerged in the pond. Their kayaks were floating nearby.
Neither Fritz nor Boerman wore a life jacket.
Investigators believe both men drowned accidentally, East Providence police Capt. Michael Rapoza said last week.
However, the medical examiner won’t have an official report on the deaths until they receive a toxicology report.
The toxicology could clarify if alcohol was a factor in the deaths.
Nine people drowned in 2023, RI Health Department says
Tom Griffiths is an aquatic safety expert.
Griffiths, who studies drownings, developed a widely employed strategy that lifeguards can use to surveil swimmers.
Griffith believes signs can help deter some people from taking risks they shouldn’t take, but he also says signs and even blinking lights can fail.
“Signage can work, but I think it has to be creative,” he said.
He said he likes the combination of lights, signs and announcements put in place at Conimicut.
Anniversary of the Conimicut Point double fatality
June 20 was the anniversary of the 2021 double-fatality at Conimicut Point that took the lives of 10-year-old Yoskarly Martinez and a 35-year-old Central Falls man who died trying to save her.
Large warning signs with bright red lettering were posted in the sand near the device.
To the west, the back of the point, but not the submerged sandbar, was inhabited by people who were fishing.
It was a visible difference from previous years, when almost always some anglers would wade into the shallows along the point, to the east, and toward the strong currents in between the lighthouse and the dry sand at the point.
On this occasion, this year, the shallows were people-free.
Then, at high tide, a couple wearing bathing suits sauntered out onto the point. They waded in to their shins, to their waists.
Then for a while, they played together, neck deep, in dangerous waters off the point.
Water-related deaths in Rhode Island since the first day of spring include:
July 23 : North Providence police investigated the death of a 4-year-old boy in a pool. Investigators were told the boy was pulled from the pool after “an undetermined amount of time” underwater.
July 21: The body of 65-year-old Leonidas Gonzalez, of Marlborough, Massachusetts, was recovered from the Sakonnet River. Gonzalez was on the surface along a treacherous shoreline near Indian Avenue, according to Portsmouth’s deputy police chief, Maj. Michael J. Morse. Gonzalez, a retired jeweler and grandfather, frequently fished in the area, and witnesses told police he had fished for several hours on Monday, Morse said.
July 18: A 71-year-old died from injuries, including facial injuries, that he apparently suffered when a wave crashed over him as he waded along the beachfront near the Weekapaug Inn, police say.
July 5: Two men were found dead near their kayaks in Omega Pond, in East Providence. Family members say that Joseph Fritz, 52, of East Providence, and Gregory Boerman, 37, of Allston, Massachusetts, had failed to return from a kayaking excursion on July 4.
June 23: Dexter Gutierrez Matias, 20, of East Providence, was seen in an area known as the “12 O’Clock High” on the north end of Brenton Point shoreline in Newport. Matias had been enjoying the day at the beach with friends who were helping him improve his swimming skills so he could bring his son to the beach and teach him to swim, a GoFundMe page says. “His friends tried to help save him, but they were unable to,” the page says. Searchers, including a Coast Guard air crew in a helicopter, couldn’t find him. On July 3, a man’s body was recovered in the same part of the shoreline where Matias had gone missing.
June 20: Souleymane Diagne, 29, of Senegal, is pronounced dead after Smithfield firefighters try to revive him. Diagne had been unresponsive when he was pulled from a pool at The Last Resort.
May 16: The body of a man believed to be in his early 50s is found along the Woonasquatucket River near Aleppo Street, according to Providence police.
May 14: A kayaker sees a man’s body in the Pawtuxet River near a bridge at the end of Mill Street in Cranston.
April 7: A surveillance camera along the shore of the Pawcatuck River near the public boat ramp in downtown Westerly records video of 40-year-old Matthew Brouillette, unsteady on his feet, falling into the river. Searchers are unable to find him that night. The following day a K9 team detects Brouillette’s body underwater. His body is about 30 feet from where he had fallen in and about 8 feet from shore.
Rhode Island
R.I. blood supply was low before Brown mass shooting – The Boston Globe
PROVIDENCE — The Rhode Island Blood Center’s blood supply was low before Saturday’s mass shooting at Brown University, and it is immediately stepping up blood drives to meet the need, an official said Sunday.
“We were definitely dealing with some issues with inventory going into the incident,” Executive Director of Blood Operations Nicole Pineault said.
The supply was especially low for Type 0 positive and negative, which are often needed for mass casualty incidents, she said. Type 0 negative is considered the “universal” red blood donor, because it can be safely given to patients of any blood type.
Pineault attributed the low supply to weather, illness, and the lingering effects of the pandemic. With more people working from home, blood drives at office buildings are smaller, and young people — including college students — are not donating blood at the same rate as they did in the past, she said.
“There are a lot challenges,” she said.
But people can help by donating blood this week, Pineault said, suggesting they go to ribc.org or contact the Rhode Island Blood Center at (401) 453-8383 or (800) 283-8385.
The donor room at 405 Promenade St. in Providence is open seven days a week, Pineault said. Blood drives were already scheduled for this week at South Street Landing in Providence and at Brown Physicians, and the blood center is looking to add more blood drives in the Providence area this week, she said.
“It breaks my heart,” Pineault said of the shooting. “It’s a terrible tragedy. We run blood dives regularly on the Brown campus. Our heart goes out to all of the victims and the staff. We want to work with them to get the victims what they need.”
She said she cannot recall a similar mass shooting in Rhode Island.
“In moments of tragedy, it’s a reminder to the community how important the blood supply really is,” Pineault said. “It’s an easy way to give back, to help your neighbors, and be ready in unfortunate situations like this.”
The Rhode Island Blood Center has donor centers in Providence, Warwick, Middletown, Narragansett, and Woonsocket, and it has mobile blood drives, she noted.
On Sunday, the center’s website said “Donors urgently needed. Hours extended at some donor centers, 12/14.”
Edward Fitzpatrick can be reached at edward.fitzpatrick@globe.com. Follow him @FitzProv.
Rhode Island
Authorities provide update on deadly mass shooting at Brown University in Rhode Island
Authorities said two people were killed and eight more were injured in a mass shooting at Brown University, an Ivy League school in Rhode Island. Authorities said students were on campus for the second day of final exams.
Posted
Rhode Island
RI school superintendent resigns amid antisemitic hazing investigation
A Rhode Island school superintendent has resigned amid an investigation into alleged antisemitic hazing in the district, NBC affiliate WJAR-TV reports.
Smithfield Superintendent Dr. Dawn Bartz announced her resignation in a letter addressed to the school community. Bartz has been on leave since November after a report of hazing at Smithfield High School.
The Jewish Alliance of Rhode Island said five high school football players locked a freshman student in a bathroom, sprayed Lysol at the student and yelled antisemitic slurs.
In her resignation letter, Bartz focused on her successes surrounding academic outcomes, special education and STEM opportunities and other positives for the district, and thanked the community.
“As Smithfield moves forward, I am confident the district will continue to build on this progress
and momentum. I wish all our students, staff, and families continued success in the years ahead,” she wrote.
The letter did not specify a reason for the resignation.
WJAR-TV first reported on the situation on October, when the Bartz released a statement on its investigation.
“The investigation confirmed inappropriate conduct among a small number of students,” Superintendent Dawn Bartz said in a provided statement. “Disciplinary action has been taken in accordance with district policy, and several student-athletes will not participate for the remainder of the season.”
The statement went on to say that there would be mandated training and education in response. However, the involved players were back at practice, which didn’t sit well with the victim’s family. His parents said his son walked into practice and found himself face-to-face with his alleged assailants.
Five football players were initially removed from the team for the remainder of the season but were later reinstated. When asked about the reversal in October, Bartz issued a one-sentence statement saying, “The disciplinary process has concluded and we will not be discussing details involving students.”
Smithfield Town Council President John Tassoni said the situation has deeply divided the community.
“It’s a long time coming,” Tassoni said of Bartz’s resignation. “A lot of people are angry about what happened. A lot of people don’t know the truth of what happened, nor do I.”
An investigation is underway by the school committee’s attorney and a report is expected to be delivered to the school committee sometime next year, Tassoni added. However, some people have concerns about transparency and have floated the possibility of hiring an independent investigator.
The Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island said they want the focus to be on student safety.
“While we can’t speculate on the specific reasons behind the superintendent’s decision to resign, we remain focused on what matters most: that Smithfield schools become a place where Jewish students and all students feel safe, valued, and protected from bias and harassment,” President and CEO Adam Greenman wrote in an email.
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