close

Beaches along Great Lakes to get life-saving aids

3 min read
1 / 2

In a 2011 photo provided by the Michigan Sea Grant, a rescue line bag and ring buoy are seen from the Great Lakes Water Safety Conference 2011 in Gaylord, Mich.

2 / 2

In a 2002 photo provided by the Michigan Sea Grant, swimmers play in the surf on Lake Michigan. An effort to prevent people from drowning due to dangerous currents along the Great Lakes includes installing kits with life-saving aids including a ring buoy at 10 public beaches along Lake Michigan.

DETROIT – An effort to prevent people from drowning due to dangerous currents along the Great Lakes will include installing kits with life-saving aids such as ring buoys and youth life jackets at 10 public beaches along Lake Michigan, officials announced Monday.

Michigan Sea Grant said the kits will be installed this summer. Additional support from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is expected to put similar equipment on beaches in Illinois, Indiana, Minnesota, Ohio and Pennsylvania over the next two years.

A database assembled by Michigan Sea Grant and the National Weather Service says 138 swimmers drowned in the Great Lakes over the past 12 years – including 69 people in Michigan – in incidents blamed at least in part on rip currents and other currents.

“Michigan’s Great Lakes coasts, and the shore of Lake Michigan in particular, have become the epicenter of drowning-related deaths in the Great Lakes region,” Elizabeth LaPorte, Michigan Sea Grant’s communications and education services director, said in a statement.

Dangerous currents occur throughout the Great Lakes and are common along the eastern shore of Lake Michigan. Rip currents are strong, narrow currents that move away from the shore. Trying to swim against a rip current can quickly lead to exhaustion.

Many Great Lakes beaches don’t have trained lifeguards on duty. Each of the “beach safety kits” will contain a ring buoy, a throw bag and U.S. Coast Guard-approved life jackets for youths. Cards encouraging people to closely watch children at the beach also will be distributed.

“We want people to enjoy the Great Lakes and to be safe at the beach, and this outreach effort will help raise awareness,” said Michigan Sea Grant Director Jim Diana, a professor at the University of Michigan School of Natural Resources and Environment.

The Great Lakes Current Incident Database, which was in development for more than a decade, was started to help weather forecasters alert people to potentially hazardous swimming conditions. A new searchable database went online in April.

A nationwide public education campaign starts June 1 with Rip Current Awareness Week, sponsored by the National Sea Grant College Program, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the United States Lifesaving Association and the National Park Service.

Michigan Sea Grant is a cooperative program between the University of Michigan and Michigan State University that focuses on Great Lakes research, outreach and education.

It’s supported by NOAA’s National Sea Grant. The beach kits are funded by grant money.

CUSTOMER LOGIN

If you have an account and are registered for online access, sign in with your email address and password below.

NEW CUSTOMERS/UNREGISTERED ACCOUNTS

Never been a subscriber and want to subscribe, click the Subscribe button below.

Starting at $3.75/week.

Subscribe Today