Children's Aid Society says 'good parents in a hurry' tend to leave kids in hot cars - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 09:42 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Children's Aid Society says 'good parents in a hurry' tend to leave kids in hot cars

Most of the time it's "good parents" in a rush who leave children unattended inside hot vehicles, according to the executive director of the Children's Aid Society of Ottawa.

Ottawa paramedics responded to back-to-back calls on Tuesday for kids left in hot vehicles

Ottawa Police officers speak with a caregiver after a baby was found in an unattended car on MacLaren St. in this file photo from June 7, 2015. (CBC)

Many parents may believe they aren't capable of leaving their children unattended in hot vehicles, but most of the timeit's "good parents that are in a hurry" who do so, according to the Children's Aid Society of Ottawa.

On Tuesday, Ottawa paramedicsresponded totwo calls within seven minutes after children were left inside hot cars, as temperatures soared across the city.

Paramedics are pleading with the public to remember that the inside of a vehicle parked in the sun can quickly reach 55 C, and that the first phase of heat stroke which can be fatal can develop within minutes.

While some peoplemay think those who leave their childrenunattendedinside hot vehicles are "problem parents," that's generally not the case, according toBarbaraMacKinnon,executive director of the Children's Aid Society of Ottawa.
Ottawa Police officers speak with a caregiver after a baby was found in an unattended car on MacLaren St. in this file photo from June 7, 2015. (CBC)

"People don't think it means them. They think it means somebody else that has problems," MacKinnon told CBC News.

"I have to say that 99 per cent of the chance it is good parents that are in a hurry."

About five caseseach summer in Ottawa

Police are obligated under law to call Children's Aid if they have concerns about a child's well-being, and they're more likely to make that call when children are found inside vehicles during extremely hot weather, said MacKinnon.

The organization gets involved in about five suchcases each summerin Ottawa, she added.

"I think people just don't recognize how quickly it can happen, and that...chance that they got held up in the store that they went into, where they were delayed longer, could happen."

MacKinnon said she recognizes that parents today have a loton the go, but the consequences of leaving a child in a sweltering car can be deadly.

She said it's a risk with a very simple solution just don't do it.

"They're the types of risks that we don't have to take."