Thursday, October 28, 2021

Halloween Safety Tips

It's spooky season! If your little ones are out gathering goodies this weekend, here are some safety tips to keep in mind:

Drivers:

  • Turn on your headlights to improve visibility - Even in the day time.
  • Watch for trick-or-treaters on curbs, streets and medians. They could be wearing darker costumes so keep your eyes peeled.
  • Slow down in residential areas.  Give yourself extra time to react should a trick-or-treater dash into the road.
  • Be sure to scan both sides of the street as you drive. Be prepared  to stop for trick-or-treaters.


Trick or Treaters:

 If you are young at heart and will be taking to the streets to collect some goodies, there are a few things you need to know:
  • Let your parents or guardians know where you will be going. Create a route and stick to it. 
  • Follow safety rules, and look both ways before crossing the streets. Don’t cross between vehicles.
  • Trick or treat in a group. It can be more entertaining and safer. Younger children should be with a responsible adult or youth.
  • Be bright at night - ensure that that your costume can be seen by drivers. Enhance your costumes with reflective tape or glow sticks.
  • You should be able to see without difficulty. Don’t wear bulky masks or head gear. Consider using non-toxic face make up or paint.
  • Carry a flashlight inside your Halloween bucket or bag so you can see where you are going. DON’T shine it into the eyes of drivers.
  • Stay on sidewalks - if you must walk in the street, walk on the left side, facing traffic.

We hope you have a happy Halloween! 

Monday, October 11, 2021

For crash victims’ families, the moment of truth about the worst

Part of a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper’s job is notifying next of kin when a person dies in a car crash. One trooper remembers a mother collapse in a doorway. Another caught a mother crumpling to the floor. This is the final story in the four-part series involving KHP death notifications. 

 Watch Trooper Wright's video and read the story below.


‘They know why you’re there’

Technical Trooper Nick Wright

Technical Trooper Nick Wright recalls a crash where a 17-year-old had been killed because a 16-year-old crossed into his lane and struck him head-on just before he was to exit. She was allegedly speeding and texting.

It was Wright’s first death notification in which he was the lead investigator. What Wright remembers most is the follow-up investigation a day or two later at a home where some of the 17-year-old’s family had gathered. Maybe 15 people joined around a dining room table – all of their eyes on him. He remembers the father saying he couldn’t sleep. The father was obsessed about how the girl came to be where she was when she lost control. Wright recalls them being a loving, forgiving family.

Now, every time Wright drives past the cross put up near where the two cars collided – it’s a neatly weeded roadside memorial, “I think about it,” he said.

In another crash, a young man had become intoxicated and was found in his wrecked SUV at the bottom of a steep embankment. After he died, Wright and his patrol partner pulled up outside the mother’s home. She was standing at the screen door. When she saw the troopers, she collapsed to her knees. “They know why you’re there,” he said of those moments.

He introduces himself the same way every time: “Hey, I’m Trooper Wright. Can I come inside?”

With the grieving mother, he remembers getting her tissue from the kitchen and maybe a glass of water. Still, years later, he can see her home. “I could almost draw the inside of her house.”

He was relieved when a chaplain showed up to help comfort her. He explains that when giving death notifications, he and another trooper go in as a pair. “We kind of pick who’s saying the words before we go there.” He’s been with the KHP for 16 years now. So he feels like he should offer to say “the words” to the loved ones if he’s with a less experienced trooper. It’s part of his personality, he said. He’s a greeter at church. “I’m kind of a people person.”

About “the words”: “You cut straight to the chase,” he said. If he’s notifying a young woman that her father has died in a crash, for example, he’ll say it as clearly and clinically as possible: “I’m really sorry to tell you, but your dad’s been killed in a crash.”

The reactions vary. Some loved ones pass out, some fall, some sob, some deny it, some get angry. Anything can happen.

 “You learn to talk to people,” he said. “You are greatly affecting these people’s lives.”

He remembers hugging a family before he left. Most people in law enforcement, he noted, don’t hug on the job. Still, he said, “You can’t be robotic. You just have to be a person to them. You are delivering the worst news to this person. There’s no good way you can do it. … I remember choking back tears.”


Friday, October 8, 2021

Finding new ways to cycle safely

 By Don Snyder

Don Snyder at a cycling event.

Five years ago, I wrote an article about my personal experience with roadway safety after others heard my story about surviving a car-bicycle crash I was involved in. That story detailed what had occurred on a late evening ride in May 2014 when my wife and I were struck from behind by an inattentive motorist. Fortunately, we both survived that incident, although there were lingering effects from our injuries for some time after that unfortunate event (read 2016 story here).

Now I’m sharing an update to my current status as an avid cyclist, what experiences I have had and what changes I may have made since this accident.

I suppose as a natural progression of my cycling activities, I have become involved with other types of events, as well as becoming more involved with group rides. Many may be aware that the gravel riding scene has grown rapidly, and I too have become more active in these types of rides. Of course, there is typically much less traffic on gravel roads than on paved roadways, so naturally less chance for conflicts with motorized traffic. The lower speeds vehicles travel on unpaved roads also gives more time for both drivers and cyclists to react to each other’s presence.

 I have also discovered a great group of fellow cyclists to ride with on shorter evening rides and longer weekend events. Travelling in a larger group makes all of us more visible than we would be on solo rides, and vehicular traffic seems to be more conscious of passing our larger groups more cautiously.

 There are also more options these days for locations to ride that are not on major roadways. The City of Wichita and the surrounding areas have a pretty decent network of both paved and unpaved riding trails that cyclists can utilize where we do not have to be as cognizant of other road users.

I still do some paved road cycling where I am riding in the same type of environment where I had my accident seven years ago, but I make every effort to be aware of vehicles on the same roads I am on. I have used a rear-view mirror that is attached to my helmet for many years so I can see what is approaching from behind. I also choose not to have any audio devices playing while I ride so I am more aware of the sounds of others on the roadway.

So, in conclusion, I did not let the accident I was involved with take away what has become my favorite pastime, and of course I was very blessed that my injuries did not create permanent debilitating physical issues. Cycling will always be part of my lifestyle as long as I am physically able to ride, and the lessons I have learned while riding have made me more safety conscious so I can continue these activities. 

Motorists and cyclists both have to share the same roadways to get to our destinations, and we all need to be aware of others on our journeys and show the same level of respect we want for ourselves.

 

Don Snyder is the KDOT Metro Engineer in Wichita

 

 

Thursday, October 7, 2021

My grandson is safe thanks to his car seat

By Brenda White


In July 2017, my husband, Marvin, was taking our three-year-old grandson, Macen, to daycare for the afternoon. It was a rainy day, around noon, on a Topeka city street when a ¾-ton pickup truck lost control on a curve and slammed into my husband’s car. 

Our grandson was in his car seat on the opposite side of the car where the majority of the impact occurred. Even though my husband had severe injuries, our grandson remained safely in the car seat with minor cuts from the seat belt and from glass. 

They transported him in the ambulance with my husband. Emergency personnel took our grandson in the fully intact car seat in the ambulance to the local hospital.  He was checked out and released that same day. 

I firmly believe the car seat saved Macen from more severe injuries. My husband was also able to focus on talking to Macen in the car until others were there to help get them out. 

Properly installed and used car seats for children save lives. I truly believe this. Macen is proof of that and thriving as a seven-year-old boy now. 

Brenda and her husband reside in Topeka.



Wednesday, October 6, 2021

The importance of good driving decisions

By Casey Simoneau

Casey Simoneau (third from right), with his family

It was an unexpected call when asked to do a follow-up to the blog that I wrote nine years ago. Many lives have been changed since that time, including my own. I no longer work for the Kansas Highway Patrol, but I am running my own business and serving as Mayor of Baldwin City. However, past experiences always stay and impact your future decisions, and my work for the Kansas Highway Patrol is no exception to the rule.

As my life may have taken on a new direction, the memories from my time in law enforcement still impact me even more now than before. When I wrote the previous story, I had one child. But now I have three children and one on the way. I still find myself driving the same highways I once patrolled and continue to be reminded of the fatalities I had worked in those specific areas. I use those moments to explain to my children the importance of good decisions. 

Each person has decisions to make, and sometime those decisions have a positive or negative impact on another person in our communities. Unfortunately, often times the decision to drive while impaired, with alcohol or drugs, have a more immediate impact on families, friends and communities. Those decisions lead to memories and pain that is never forgotten.  

I still drive K-10 and see the cable barriers that were installed after a traffic accident that I worked involving young children. I often tell the story of a sibling of the deceased child. I remember her sitting on my lap on the days following the accident and giving her a Trooper Bear. Those memories do not leave me.

A community came together and mourned the loss of the child and rallied around the family to create change so that it did not happen to another family. Cable barriers were installed shortly after to help lessen the opportunity of that type of event occurring again.   TOGETHER this community helped to save lives.

This is the most profound memory of all the fatalities that I worked. I often find myself thinking about what could have been. The sister would be nearing her teenage years now and all she has is a distant memory of her brother. She will never have the same experiences as others. She will not remember fighting with her brother, celebrating with her brother or snuggling her brother. A community lost the opportunity to see a child grow. All these lives changed over a person’s bad decision. Often poor decisions can be made right, but this one can never be undone.

Please think before you drive as you do not know the negative impacts of your decision to your family, friends and community. It may be a decision that cannot be made right and can leave many lives changed forever.

Casey Simoneau is the Mayor of Baldwin City

Link to previous blog here


Tuesday, October 5, 2021

This was no accident

By Adrienne Siddens

Randall and Adrienne Siddens with their children.

On May 5, 2019, Randall left the house early to go to work and he never made it home. Randall was a husband, stay-at-home dad, runner, builder, and friend to all. When he kissed me, said goodbye, and walked out of the house that morning, he was in the prime of his life. At 33 years old, he had a beautiful two-year-old daughter who adored him and a spunky almost one-year-old son who had barely had a chance to do the fun father/son activities that every dad looks forward to. Randall and I were excitedly preparing to find out the gender of our third and final baby, renovating our home, and accomplishing the goals we had been dreaming of during our nine years of marriage.

Randall worked that morning at the Tri-Zou triathlon event in Columbia, Missouri. He had set up the racecourse, worked on the race staff throughout the event, and was picking up cones after it was finished. He worked for the race company, UltraMax, for a few years and their team always worked with care to make their racecourses safe for both the runners and the staff. They were professionals in their field. But no amount of safety precautions can protect you from the reckless choices of others.

In an intersection marked with race cones, an unlicensed, uninsured driver was going 10 miles per hour over the speed limit while on a video call, before she looked up to see the police escort that was blocking traffic behind Randall and his team. To avoid crashing into the police car, she swerved around it, never even noticing the cones or the workers who were in front of it.

When she hit Randall, throwing him 100 feet through the air, he broke his pelvis and ribs, and suffered a severe trauma to his head. Randall spent the next seven months in multiple hospitals, ICU’s, and rehab facilities and passed away on November 18, just two weeks after his 34th birthday. He missed his son’s first birthday, the birth of his third daughter, and countless other events he had been looking forward to.

The news articles all call it a tragic accident, but this was no accident. Accidents happen regardless of careful planning and attention. The unnecessary and senseless wreck that took his life was the direct result of choice. The woman who hit him chose to break multiple laws that day. She chose to get behind the wheel of a car despite knowing it was not lawful to do so. She chose to be reckless in her haste to get where she was going. She chose to prioritize her phone conversation over the safety of herself and others.

Those choices were intentional and not by accident, making Randall’s death a choice someone made as well. The choices made behind the wheel of a car may seem insignificant at the time, but every moment and every choice have the potential to change lives forever. Randall, our children, myself and even the driver who will spend her next five years in prison, all suffered life altering consequences that day because of distracted and irresponsible driving.

 

CLICK HERE for a video narrated by Adrienne and Sgt. Andrew Perkins about the crash.  

 



Monday, October 4, 2021

For crash victims’ families, the moment of truth about the worst

Part of a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper’s job is notifying next of kin when a person dies in a car crash. One trooper remembers a mother collapse in a doorway. Another caught a mother crumpling to the floor. This is the third story in the four-part series involving KHP death notifications. 

Watch Trooper Dryden's video and read the story below.


‘Don’t beat around the bush’

Master Trooper Joel Dryden

Master Trooper Joel Dryden reminds himself that a death notification is prompted by an event so sudden, it’s not as if the loved ones can prepare for it. Families have so many questions about how and why it happened. They might keep asking the same question. “They’re still trying to make sense out of it. You don’t always get answers, and that’s also hard to deal with,” he said.

After about 17 years with the Highway Patrol, death notifications remain the hardest part of the job, Dryden said. He patrols Harvey County.

With experience, he decided he needs help dealing with a family. Chaplains are a big help; they assist by bringing in relatives and others who can help.

The academy instructs troopers, “Don’t beat around the bush,” he said. “There’s no way to say it that it’s not going to hurt,” he said. He uses words that are clear and to the point: like “killed” or “died,” not long phrases that delay the news.

He has a strategy when he goes to a family’s home: Coax them into the house, get them to sit down. But sometimes they don’t want to sit. “It’s like they know – ‘As soon as I go and sit on the couch, this is real,’ so there are some who really resist hearing the news.”

Once, he was getting ready tell a mother that her young adult son had died. She wouldn’t sit down, was “kind of forcing me to say it.” And as she stood there, “Just immediately her body went limp,” and all he could do was try to brace her as she sank to the floor. They just sat there.

“You end up putting yourself in their shoes,” he said. 


Friday, October 1, 2021

Put the brakes on fatalities for those who work on the highways

By Marilyn Goodheart


September 6, 1995, started out like every other morning. My husband, Master Trooper Dean Goodheart, left home for his job with the Kansas Highway Patrol. Dean was headed east on I-70 around 6:30 that morning when he observed a semi and proceeded to stop it for an inspection. 

He stopped behind the semi, turned on his emergency lights and began to perform the roadside safety inspection. As he stepped down from the driver's door of the semi cab, a westbound car driven by a young college student struck him. Dean's injuries were immediately fatal, and my life and our family were changed forever.

Dean was just 49 years old at the time of his death and had served the citizens of Kansas for 23 years. He knew the dangers he faced in this profession, but he loved to help people. The driver had been driving all night to return to college. It is a known fact that sleepy and distracted drivers are as dangerous as drunk drivers.

This crash could have been prevented had the driver just slowed down and moved to the far lane and away from the emergency lights. The "Move Over'' Law had not been in force at that time. That lead the Kansas State Troopers Association to begin a crusade to bring the Move Over Law to Kansas. They reached out to me to advocate for the Move Over Law and hoping no one else would have to endure the same pain we did, I did advocate for the Move Over Law.

In 2000, House Bill 2641 was signed into law requiring drivers to “Slow Down and Move Over” near stopped emergency vehicles. This bill is known by many as the “Goodheart Law” and has reduced the number of emergency vehicles and officers being struck. Goodheart's Law was amended during the 2006 Legislative Session to incorporate roadside crews, such as the Patrol's Motorist Assistance Technicians and the Kansas Department of Transportation's highway road crews. The amendment requires traffic on four-lane highways to move away from vehicles engaged in highway construction or maintenance operations when those vehicles display amber flashing lights.

Since this law went into effect, it has saved countless lives and prevented injury and property damage. I believe Dean continues to protect the citizens, visitors, first responders, and his fellow colleagues due to this law.

Because of this tragedy, I became active with National Concerns of Police Survivors (C.O.P.S.). In March 2001, some of our Kansas survivors and myself were instrumental in starting a Kansas chapter to be there for other survivors. Kansas Concerns of Police Survivors supports families of officers killed in the line of duty.

Thanks to the hard work and dedication by Colonel Mark Bruce and his staff, Governor Jeff Colyer signed SB 375 into law on May 8, 2018, which designates memorial highways across Kansas in honor of the sacrifice our fallen officers have made. SB 375 was unanimously passed by both the House and Senate before its adoption. My husband Dean’s marker is located on Highway 83 north of Oakley and continues to Highway 24 west of Colby.

It's been 26 years since we lost Dean. This one moment in time caused my family's life to change forever. I lost my husband and best friend of 15 years. My children and grandchildren lost a great father, grandfather and mentor. Only three of my grandchildren were born before he was killed. He is missed by family, friends and co-workers at all functions in our life such as graduations, weddings, holidays and school activities.

There is not a day that goes by that I don’t think of Dean. As you pass these highway markers, please remember to give all first responders and road crews room to work so they may go home to their families.

Marilyn Goodheart

KS C.O.P.S. Treasurer
Kansas Concerns of Police Survivors