Making day-care center playgrounds safe
Greg Risling
COSTA MESA -- Pam Wiener can’t bring herself to vacuum her house
sometimes.
That job was usually left to her 3-year-old son, Brandon, who was
meticulous in his ways and had a penchant for cleanliness.
Simple chores have become laborious undertakings for Wiener since her
son was killed May 3 by a man allegedly bent on killing innocent
children. Brandon and 4-year-old Sierra Soto were run over by Steven
Allen Abrams who barreled his car onto a playground filled with children.
Wiener has joined hands with other parents at the school traumatized
by the tragedy and begun plans to establish a foundation.
“I need to focus my energy on something positive,” Wiener said. “We
are just beginning the first stages of the foundation, but it’s something
we are very determined to do.”
At this point, the group of parents only have a name for the
foundation -- For Our Children’s Ultimate Safety, or FOCUS -- and a goal
to provide funding for safety structures at day-care centers.
Before the freakish event at Southcoast Early Childhood Learning
Center where Sierra and Brandon played, there was only a chain-link fence
that separated the children from traffic whisking by on Santa Ana Avenue.
The state’s health and safety code calls for a fence at least 4 feet high
to shield children on day-care center playgrounds.
“Having just chain-link fences isn’t going to cut it,” Wiener said.
“There needs to be more protection for kids if there is an accident. It
could happen to any child. I don’t want to see it happen again.”
For Wiener and her family, the move to Costa Mesa earlier this year
was supposed to be for the better. They wanted to escape the terror they
experienced while living in the San Fernando Valley. Wiener was robbed at
gunpoint in 1996 and a year later Brandon was escorted by police officers
from his day-care center as two men clad in bullet-resistant armor
riddled cars and homes with bullets three blocks away.
The family was enamored with Orange County, especially CostaMesa,
which didn’t seem to be laden with violent crime.
But in May as she was signing Brandon out of his class at Southcoast,
the car came careening through the yard and Brandon was seriously
injured. He was rushed to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.
Martha Hernandez, whose son was a classmate of Brandon’s and was on
the playground that day, said Wiener has been an inspiration to other
parents.
“She has been remarkably strong throughout this,” she said. “It’s
incredible how she has dealt with it.”
Hernandez, like Wiener, didn’t know much about nonprofit organizations
prior to the tragedy. But that hasn’t stopped Hernandez, who is taking a
Cal State Fullerton extension course in Garden Grove that helps students
such as herself to establish a foundation.
“We are still going to need help from people who are experienced in
this area,” Hernandez said. “But I’m learning a lot about the framework
needed for this project.”
Cyndi Soto, Sierra’s mother, also has started a foundation called
Sierra’s Light, which aims to educate parents about safety standards
while calling for legislation to protect day-care centers. Unlike Soto,
Wiener visits the school on a regular basis and considers it part of her
healing process.
“There is a connection and a bond there,” she said. “It’s cathartic to
talk with the teachers. They are just as much as victims as the kids
are.”
Wiener said she misses Brandon calling for her. She can’t forget her
baby son but she still has a family to raise. She has two other children,
the youngest a 2-year-old daughter, who has taken over her brother’s
household chores.
Brandon’s birthday is Oct. 24.
“He’s always there for me ... I carry his pictures everywhere,” she
said. “It’s devastating but he would want me to go on and do positive
things.”
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