Friday, September 01, 2006



Safety tips to help protect children

By By Bridgett Morales Kilgore bkilgore@md-times.com
Wednesday August 2, 2006

Mooresville
Parents in the Mooresville area are on high alert following a report of a stranger who touched a child at Pioneer Park.
The incident provides an important opportunity for parents to talk to their children about safety, said Morgan County Sheriff’s Department detective Volitta Fritsche.
Fritsche is a trainer for r.a.d.Kids, which stands for Resist Aggression Defensively, an educational self-protection program for children. Mooresville began offering the training last year after a student survey showed students were concerned about abduction, Mooresville Consolidated School Corp. Community Relations Coordinator Susan Haynes said.
Haynes said the survey was taken when the Amber Alert System was started and was prominent on television, radio and highway signs.
Haynes said the program provides not only self-defense and safety education, but a combination of safety information that provides skills that even elementary-aged children can use to defend themselves.
Haynes said parents are encouraged to attend the training to provide an opportunity to start conversation about safety and rules for home, the neighborhood, playground and everywhere else.
Mooresville received a grant to provide the training from Learn and Serve America of Homeland Security Division to train several local people to teach the r.a.d.Kids program to elementary students.
More than 20 students completed the 10-hour safety training. Haynes said the Mooresville schools will be offering the program again to students ages 5-7 and 8-12 in the upcoming school year.
Fritsche also received an additional grant for the sheriff’s department to offer the program to more families and children.
The need to teach children safety techniques has been spotlighted by the incident at Pioneer Park and one in a park near Fishers, Fritsche said.
“Parents should always share an open line of communication with kids,” Fritsche said. “And be as honest as you can. We want to protect them from the ugliness, but you don’t have to go into the gory details.”
What parents should tell kids to keep them safe
Fritsche said the first line of defense for kids when a stranger approaches is to scream.
“It seems as if the boy by screaming reacted right by calling his grandma and that is what helped him,” Fritsche said, referring to the incident at Pioneer Park.
Fritsche said children in public areas should be accompanied by an adult.
Even then, children should be told to be aware of their surroundings.
“Know your exits, know your surroundings like where the nearest home is, the nearest phone,” Fritsche said they advise kids in the training.
Kids who ride their bikes in rural areas should especially be aware of these safety tips.
Fritsche said parents should tell their children if someone tries to abduct them, to give a good fight.
“I suggest parents tell their children to never go peacefully,” Fritsche said. “My thing is, you hit, kick, you yell, you pinch, do whatever you can to get loose.”
And, at all costs, she advises children to anything they have to do to avoid getting in a vehicle with a person who might be attempting to abduct them.
“They are going to try to make you more isolated. They don’t want witnesses.”
Resources for parents
Even if students are not able to take the class, through the Internet, parents have access to Web site for families to help identify dangerous areas for kids. Web sites such like www.familywatchdog.org and the Indiana sex offender Web site, www.indianasheriffs.org, also provide information to parents to help talk to kids about safety issues.





FAMILYWATCHDOG

Tuesday, April 18, 2006
The web site helps keep track of sexual predators in the area.
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What makes it special is that this site will send you free weekly undates on the movement of sex predators or daily updates for $18 a year. You can also select just the photos of predators in the area for a quick glance of faces you need to know in your area.



Video: Watch Video


Online Sex Offender Web Site Is User-Friendly


Last Updated:03-22-06 at 12:48PM
There are more than 63,000 convicted sex offenders in California, with at least 4,000 right here in San Diego. Now, tracking their whereabouts just got easier.There are lots of things parents can do to protect their children. One thing you can do from your computer is log on to FamilyWatchdog.us. Like other Web sites, it alerts parents and the public on the whereabouts of sexual predators.Mother of three Bernadette Abshier has used other Web sites before as a way of protecting her children."It's good to have information, and it's good to be able to see it quickly," she said. "I haven't been on this particular Web site, but other Web sites that are offered and I have been on them, so I am aware."Police say it's crucial for parents to know who's living in their neighborhood, and if strangers are lurking around schools or parks.The FamilyWatchdog.us site is very user-friendly. All you have to do is enter an address and a detailed map pops up. Click on the squares that appear and you'll get information about sexual predators -- what they look like, where they live, their convictions, and where they work.Where they worked really interested Bernadette."I think that's new, I don't think I've been on a Web site that gives you the difference," she said.The information on Family Watchdog's Web site is the same information on California's Megan's Law Web site. The Family Watchdog Web site is the only sex offender Web site that has been featured on the Oprah Winfrey Show.