Kids are lucky to be a live after a dangerous and wild ride through a storm drain
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Kansas City, MO (KCTV) — A Blue Springs family says their kids are lucky to be a live after a dangerous and wild ride through a storm drain.
The kids, ages 8 and ten, ended up in the rushing water after sliding into the ditch then went inside the storm drain.
“They were in the dark; it was wet; and they couldn’t breathe at all; and thought they were dying,” said Tara Johnson mother of the children.
They traveled underground, through the pipes, for blocks. The family and KCTV5 both estimate this was at least 600 feet and around the length of 2 football fields.
Eventually, they exited near a rocky creek bed before ending up on the bank.
The kids — bloodied, bruised and shaken — walked home.
“He has a huge bump on his head he isn’t really talking in shock–white in shock,” said Tara. “My daughter is walking but she looks like a ghost.” She rushed the kids to an Emergency Room. Her kids were lucky.
Almost every year someone dies in an uncovered storm drain. They get sucked in by rushing water, and either the pipe is too long to survive, or they get stuck.
“It happens all over the place, and these things are very, very dangerous,” said Ken MacKenzie with the Mile High Flood District. He’s a nationwide expert on storm drains.
MacKenzie keeps an unofficially count of all the deaths and accidents. Right now, storm drain deaths are simply lumped in with drownings. Here’s what recently happened in a 2-year period according to MacKenzie.
June 30 2014, 17- year old Logan Blake died in Cedar Rapids, IA
May 19, 2015, 15- year old John Steiner died in Loreauville, LA
May 25, 2015 Captain Jason Farley with the Claremore Fire Department drowned, Lieutenant Zane James suffered serious injuries in Claremore, OK
May 24th, 2015 14-year old Damien Blade and his dog died in DeSoto Texas
May 31st, 2015 4 people died in Oklahoma City, OK
KCTV5 asked MacKenzie to watch a combination of videos collected by the parents and KCTV5.
“It’s amazing they survived it. It does not look survivable to me,” MacKenzie said. He noted that the kids took a turn and that the water was rushing in from multiple sources.
MacKenzie helped rewrite the rules in Denver, where now storm drains larger than 6-inches are covered. But many municipalities balk and the expense and maintenance of storm drain covers.
Tara wrote a letter to the city of Blue Springs warning about the hazard. The city responded that the system had been designed and constructed using industry standards.
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