Parent concerned about safety rails on pier
- Share via
Kenneth Ma
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Up until about eight months ago, Chris Frei could be
seen walking on the pier with his 2-year-old daughter, Maggie.”It was a
nice place to go for a walk and enjoy the ocean and the weather,” said
Frei, a Trudy Street resident. “We used to go down, get a bagel and walk
outside.”But then Frei noticed something. The gaps in the railings along
the pier were so wide his daughter could easily slip between them and
plunge 38 feet into the ocean.
“I don’t like to walk along the pier anymore with my daughter, because if
she were to slip through, I would have to jump over to rescue her,” he
said.
The railing is made up of four bars, with a foot between each one. At
extreme low tide, the distance from the pier’s deck to the ocean ranges
from 27 1/2 to 38 feet from the beginning of the pier to the end.
“Your average toddler is about 2 feet tall, so it would not take much for
them to step up to the railing and fall through,” Frei said.
Because the pier is a major attraction for families, Frei said he would
like the city to consider retrofitting the railings for safety,
eliminating the wide spaces between the four bars.
“I think they should be concerned about safety,” he said. “If they are
spending city dollars to make public attractions, they should at least
make it safe.”Frei said the Manhattan Beach pier could serve as a good
example for the city.
Torrance resident Jennifer Balderas, who takes her 2-year-old son to the
Manhattan Beach pier, said the railings there are spaced close enough to
protect youngsters from any danger of falling through.
Ross Cranmer, Huntington Beach’s director of building and safety, said
the railings were built in compliance with city codes and are safe,
though he acknowledged that toddlers could be in danger if left
unsupervised. He said the city has no record of any accidental falls
through the railings, and the city has no plans to retrofit them.
Freeway overpasses and cliff railings pose the same potential danger to
toddlers, Cranmer said, adding that it is the parents’ responsibility to
ensure their children are supervised at all times in such places.
“Nothing is a substitute for parental supervision in any hazardous
situation,” he said. “How much do you protect citizens from themselves?”
Frei said he agrees that parents should be responsible for their
children’s safety. But the risk should be minimized, he said.
“Even though the margin of error is slim, the potential of a child
falling through the pier is there,” he said. “Maybe [the city] should put
a sign at the pier that reads, ‘Use the pier at your own risk.’ ”
City spokesman Rich Barnard said there are no safety standards for pier
railings, and because there has never been an accident, he doesn’t think
the city would be liable.
“If you take that position, why even have lifeguards?” Frei said.
Frei said he plans to submit a formal complaint to the city. And for now,
he said, his family will spend their weekends elsewhere.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.