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Scott Wolfson, director of public affairs for the Consumer Product Safety Commission, said the agency is committed to working with the families on education campaigns and other efforts to ensure pool safety. "We certainly understand their position," Wolfson said. "We want this law to save lives. We care deeply about what happened to the families." Schultz said Baker and Cohn can play a key role in pool safety changes by speaking from the heart about what happened to their children. "They've been heroic," Schultz said. "The courage that these two women have shown, their desire and passion to never let what happened to their children happen to any other child, their selflessness, it's truly amazing." Cohn and her husband, Brian, formed The ZAC Foundation in their son's memory to advocate for pool safety. "There's not a real voice representing the families out there," Brian Cohn said. The Cohns are working to create a model law that would require multiple drains to reduce the suction power in pools and a safety vacuum release system that prevents suction entrapment by detecting sudden suction pressure obstruction and shutting down the filtration system. They hope to raise awareness about pool safety just as earlier efforts led to seat belt and bicycle helmet requirements. "What we want to do is create the same sort of generational shift around pools," Karen Cohn said. Baker said she met Cohn a few years ago and agreed to consult with her foundation. "It's remarkable how quickly she felt a desire and a commitment to try to do something," Baker said. Drownings and injuries from pool drain suctions are a long-running concern. Former presidential candidate John Edwards won a verdict of $25 million in North Carolina
-- at the time, the largest personal injury award in state history -- in the case of Valerie Lakey, a 5-year-old Raleigh girl whose intestines were sucked from her body when she was caught in the suction of a pool drain in 1993. The child survived. Since 1985, there have been more than 150 reported cases of swimming pool drain entrapments, leading to at least 48 deaths and many serious injuries, including disembowelment, of children and adults, according to a lawsuit the Cohns filed against Greenwich, Shoreline Pools and others. "We realized that there are so many parents and caregivers who just don't know the hidden dangers of their swimming pools," Karen Cohn said.
[Associated
Press;
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