Bumper Guardian

June 29, 2010

Jacob

Filed under: News,Stories — Tags: — Your Bumper Guardian @ 7:03 am

Jacob

By Jeff Libby, February 21, 2005
It was before 1 p.m., and his family’s housewarming party wasn’t until later Saturday night. He just needed to run back to the store to buy one last thing: balloons.

The 35-year-old tile contractor and father of four closed the tailgate to his 1997 Ford F-150 and hopped in the driver’s seat. He didn’t have to check the mirror before pulling out because he had backed into the driveway.

But as he pulled forward, the truck ran over and killed his youngest child, 22-month-old Jacob.

” I just didn’t see him,” a shaken Mills said Sunday, surrounded by family and friends at his Shawsbury Way home.

Inside the home’s vaulted living room, Mills sat on the floor at the feet of his wife, Cheryl, and buried his head in her lap, sobbing as she talked about how Jacob was learning his first words and still called just about everyone, including his father, “Momma.”

” He was a beautiful, precious boy,” said Cheryl Mills, 40, general manager for U.S. Rep. Ric Keller’s Orlando offices. Dark-haired and dimpled, Jacob was always happy, family members said.

” He was just so sweet with his chubby cheeks,” said Dawn Chitwood, one of Jacob’s aunts who lives just a five-minute walk away. “He smiled when you took his binky [pacifier].”

His family moved from Orlando into the five-bedroom home in January, partly for the increased room for Jacob.

The Millses have three other boys, Anthony Santos, 18, Nicholas Santos, 14, and Garrett, 8. The boys’ parents were too distraught Sunday to begin arrangements for Jacob’s funeral, but the couple said their children were handling the loss well.

” They’re stronger than we are,” Donald Mills said. Donald Mills is far from alone in feeling the pain of accidentally running over a child. Jacob was one of a growing number of children killed in slow-speed accidents in their driveways, according to the advocacy group Kids and Cars, which blames the increasing popularity of large vehicles that also have large blind spots.

” So sad, so predictable, so preventable. I mean, this fits the mold,” said Janette Fennell, director of the Leawood, Kan.-based Kids and Cars. “These children don’t have the cognitive ability to understand that even though they can see the truck, Daddy can’t see them.”

The federal government does not track such deaths, but at least 26 children nationwide were killed from 2000 to 2004 in similar accidents involving vehicles moving forward in driveways and parking lots, according to Kids and Cars. Just as with Jacob’s death, most of the vehicles were driven by close relatives or family friends.

Still more kids, at least 302, were killed during the span by vehicles that backed over them, according to the group, which is pushing for regulations to force car makers to do more to protect children.

Many of the accidents parallel Jacob’s death in that the family is doing something out of the routine, and the driver loses track of where the children are, Fennell said.

Jacob had been eating fruit and a hot dog for lunch when his father pulled up with the party supplies. Jacob left his food to help bring things in, a new thrill for the youngster, Cheryl Mills said.

” He was being very helpful, being one of the guys,” she said.

Cheryl Mills was vacuuming in the living room. Neighbors in the lakeside neighborhood heard her husband’s screams and then hers.

Several people called emergency officials, including Jacob’s brother Nicholas, who ran down the street to a  neighbor’s house after seeing his brother lying still on his side in the driveway.

An ambulance rushed Jacob to Florida Hospital Fish Memorial in Orange City. He was pronounced dead at 1:59 p.m.

The Volusia County Sheriff’s Office said Sunday its investigation continues but charges are unlikely.

That’s of little consolation to Donald Mills.

” Tell parents to stop getting so busy with their lives, to spend more time with their kids,” Mills said, “because I’m not going to get to spend any more time with my kid.”

But as he pulled forward, the truck ran over and killed his youngest child
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June 24, 2010

Seth McCartney

Filed under: News,Stories — Tags: — Your Bumper Guardian @ 6:03 am

Seth McCartney

By COLLEEN KRANTZ
August 14, 2005

De Soto, Ia. – Outside, in the yard, a sheet covered Seth’s body.
Inside, the 3-year-old’s siblings huddled in a bedroom, crying and praying. Deputies asked all the necessary questions as the forgotten chicken-and-macaroni casserole dried out in the oven.

Marc McCartney, his jeans dirty from kneeling beside his son, turned to Stephanie, his wife of 10 years.

” Please forgive me.”

Just a few hours before, Marc McCartney had backed a Bobcat skid loader into their youngest son.

Seth McCartney died Sept. 29, 2003, after an afternoon of “helping” his dad, two older brothers and younger sister with landscaping work around their recently constructed home outside De Soto. It started as a happy, sunny fall day.

After their dad deposited piles of landscaping rock with the skid loader – a compact machine used on farms and in construction – the children would help move the rock into place with a toy shovel, toy rake and wheelbarrow.

Everything changed shortly after 5:30 p.m. that day when they were quitting for supper, just as Stephanie and Seth’s older sister were arriving home from piano lessons.

It was 5-year-old Samuel’s scream that first told Marc McCartney he hadn’t just backed into a toy wheelbarrow. It was a sound that stopped his mom as she was about to go inside.

Much later, Samuel would say that his little brother Seth had been pushing the little red wheelbarrow, just looking up at the sky.

Seth wasn’t watching the skid loader. And his dad didn’t see his youngest boy as he put the nearly two-ton machine in reverse.

In a hundred ways, the raw journey that Marc and Stephanie McCartney had begun as they collapsed beside their son’s crumpled body would be like that of other parents who lose a child so early, so unexpectedly.

Yet when a parent or other relative is the driver in an accident that kills a child, their immediate role is infinitely more difficult to set aside than in a drowning or other tragedy. Guilt can become a haunting presence.

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June 22, 2010

Many Deaths due to back into by vehicles on private property

Filed under: Information,Research — Tags: — Your Bumper Guardian @ 5:40 am

Last year, more than 100 children younger than 15 were killed in the United States when they were backed into by vehicles on private property, according to Kids and Cars, a Kansas-based child-safety organization that has built a database to track such deaths. The actual number could be two or three times higher, said Janette Fennell, the group’s president and founder. Legislation signed into law Wednesday by President Bush will require the federal government to begin counting these incidents on private property, and also will require research into preventing such accidents.

At least three children in Iowa have died this year when they were backed over. A grandmother in Ely hit her 6-year-old grandson; a mother in Hawarden hit her 2-year-old son; and a man in Muscatine hit a 2-year-old boy.

Fennell has noted an upward trend in the fatalities in recent years, which she attributes to the popularity of vehicles with larger rear blind spots, such as minivans, pickups and sport utility vehicles. More than 60 percent of the known incidents since 1998 involved these types of vehicles.

” And in over 70 percent of these cases, the mom or dad or another relative of the child was the driver,” Fennell said.

Accidents
The known number of children killed nationally and in Iowa each year in back-overs on private property:
2005: 62 nationwide as of July 22; three so far in Iowa.
2004: 101 nationwide; two in Iowa.
2003: 92 nationwide; one in Iowa:
2002: 71 nationwide; none known in Iowa.
2001: 52 nationwide; none known in Iowa.
Source: Kids and Cars

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June 17, 2010

Deaths in Iowa: Children killed in back-overs on private property

Filed under: News,Research,Stories — Tags: — Your Bumper Guardian @ 7:29 am

Deaths in Iowa Children killed in back-overs on private property, according to Kids and Cars: 2005:

  • Zachary Ryan, 6, in Ely on April 17;
  • Christian Topete, 2, in Hawarden on April 23;
  • Ricardo Berry, 2, in Muscatine on May 30. 2004:
  • Galilea Cardenas, 2, Columbus Junction, May 8;
  • Lindsay Brewster, 18 months, in Elvira on Sept. 26. 2003:
  • Seth McCartney, 3, in DeSoto on Sept. 29.
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June 15, 2010

Madison Faith Chatten

Filed under: Stories — Tags: — Your Bumper Guardian @ 4:47 am

Madison Faith Chatten

IN LOVING MEMORY
February 29, 2004
May 3, 2005

On an average North Dakota day, a not so average little girl was brought into our world. Madison Chatten, a leap year baby, was born February 29, 2004 in Dickinson, ND. This was her statement to the world that she was special. Her parents Aaron and Sheena Chatten, thought the world of there little girl. She was their first child and they couldn’t have asked more. She was a healthy, smart, beautiful, and had a distinct personality at a very young age. Madison was the kind of person that made you happy that you ever knew, met, or saw her. She was an amazing child that was very full of love.

She had a love for music and it was show by the way she would “dance’ and “sing” when the sound of music hit her ears. Some of her favorite toys were toys that played music or a tune she would bop around to. She was a complete show off and a little flirt.

Her contagious laugh warmed your heart and when around Madison, a person couldn’t help but to smile and be happy.

But, on May 3, 2005 in Glasgow, MT Aaron & Sheena’s life was changed forever when there daughter Madison, was backed over by another parent at her daycare driving a large Suburban SUV. The driver could not see behind Madison when she was backing up. Madison’s life was taken immediately, she didn’t stand a chance. But, on her short time on earth Madison left a lasting impression on many people. Baby Madison was an angel on earth, and now she is an angel in heaven. She will never be forgotten and always be missed.

Madison’s father, Aaron Chatten has taken the loss of her daughter and turned his grieving into promoting change. He is trying to make change by educating parents of the dangers children face around vehicles. He is and will continue to pursue an answer so other parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and families don’t have to go through the pain of losing a child. He has started the Madison Faith Chatten Foundation, which will help work towards keeping other children safe in Montana and throughout the country. The foundation will also be helping fund emergency surgeries and medical expenses for small children in Montana, and helping with education expenses of underprivileged pre-school age children, by giving away pre-school scholarships etc. Through Madison’s foundation, many children’s lives will be touched with hopes Madison’s tragedy will seem for a purpose and not be in vain . The loss of her life will improve the and save the lives of thousands of children.

WE LOVE AND MISS YOU MADISON

LOVE, MOM AND DAD

“The eyes of a child and the eyes of an angel are much the same, similar in so many ways. They eyes of a child look through the filter of their innocence: the eyes of an angel look through the filter of the innocence of their wisdom.”

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