Tauranga mum regrets not reporting near drowning

A temporary fence has been installed following the drowning. Photo: Annemarie Quill/Stuff.

The death of a child in a Tauranga fountain has sparked regrets for a mother whose daughter almost met the same fate.

'I really wish I'd told the council,” says the woman, who spoke to Stuff on the condition of anonymity.

'It could have been [my daughter].”

Police were called to reports of a drowning incident at Memorial Park about 9.50am on Sunday, says a spokesperson.

The child was found unresponsive but could not be revived with CPR.

But it was back on January 26 in 2020 – her daughter's third birthday – when the woman's child was pulled from the same fountain.

The woman had been cooking on the BBQ when her husband carried over their dripping wet little girl, coughing up water and crying.

The three-year-old had been with her grandma and wanted to swim – along with the 20 or 30 other children already in the fountain.

The girl's dad went over to talk to his mum about 20 minutes later, and saw a shape resembling his daughter underwater in the fountain.

She'd coughed up the water she swallowed, but was okay.

It was when they got home the woman realised her daughter hadn't just fallen – she'd nearly drowned.

'She started crying and said she never wanted to go swimming again.”

The woman went over to look at the fountain after the incident, and saw it had a steep drop in the middle.

'Kind of like a trench,” she says.

While investigating, she slipped herself, and had a hard time regaining her footing on the slippery surface.

Remembering back, she thought the water reached above her knee – and she is 175cm tall.

She says if it's hard for her, imagine what it was like 'for a small child who can't get their footing and falling face first”.

The woman says she was upset, and wanted to report it to the council – but talked herself out of it.

They were newcomers to the area, and a family that were generally quite clumsy. She thought maybe grandma wasn't paying enough attention, and it was an isolated incident.

That's until she heard of the drowning at Memorial Park on Sunday.

She didn't know the age of the child or the circumstances of the drowning, but says as soon as she heard it'd happened at Memorial Park – she 'knew in her heart” it was the fountain.

The woman had seen other people commenting on social media about similar near drownings and wondered that the child might be alive if they'd all reported the dangerous swimming spot.

'I feel so sorry for them. I wish this didn't happen.”

She admits that as parents they should have investigated the fountain more before their child got in, but didn't think anything of it at the time.

'There were so many kids, we just thought it was a swimming fountain. I grew up swimming in fountains.

'I had no idea there was a huge slope.”

The woman suggests the council install a grate inside the fountain to stop children reaching the drop.

It doesn't matter if you put up signs, people will swim in there anyway, she says.

'It's such a cool fountain, they need a way to level it.”

Tauranga City Council says they have since emptied the fountain and a temporary fence is installed until further notice.

A spokesperson would not answer questions about the depth of the fountain, previous safety analysis, or about prior incidents.

They say the council will undertake a review of the safety of the fountain following the incident.

-Rachel Moore/Stuff.

3 comments

sad but also

Posted on 23-05-2023 08:54 | By Howbradseesit

As tragic as it is the fountain has signs saying not suitable for swimming. As in, children should not be in there swimming. There is an expectation that adults are responsible for their children around bodies of water and perhaps should read signs. Lets also not forget that Memorial park sits on the edge of a harbour either.


1960s and

Posted on 23-05-2023 10:11 | By treekiwi

we weren't allowed in the fountain then and were supervised to make sure we didn't get in, and that went for my kids as well. The fountain has always been there, right next to the beach and both are water hazards generations of parents easily saw and took into account.


Awful.

Posted on 23-05-2023 12:39 | By The Professor

This is an awful tragedy and my condolences g out to the family. But, I also agree with "Howbradseesit". Undoubtedly the knee-jerk brigade within the Council will now remove this fountain and continue to control us all and continue to wrap us all in cotton wool. It's a terrible accident and accidents will always happen in life......on the roads, in parks, in the water.........end of!!


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