The paddling pool may be banned in a bid to prevent childhood drownings. How about parents just stepped up to their responsibilities instead?
There is a long hot summer ahead, if the weather forecasters are correct.
And there’s a miserable time predicted for the thousands of parents who turn to the humble blow-up pool to help their kids endure the heat.
Because, if the weekend papers are correct, the Aussie tradition of a backyard slip-n-slide into the blow-up pool might be relegated to our memory banks, along with metal slippery dips and bombing your brother in the backyard pool.
Because now there is a proposal for a new ban – the humble paddling pool.
Or at least to legislate their demise with a safety group warning portable pools are “more dangerous than permanent pools.”
The group has called for paddling pools to be banned, or for fencing to be required around all portable pools – potentially making my daughter’s slightly mouldy inflatable Dora paddling pool, currently buried under a pile of broken toys in the shed, contraband goods.
It is a legitimate call, with Fairfax Media reporting there are as many as 10 incidents in Australia classified as “non-fatal drownings” in portable pools a year.
But in Australia guidelines already exist for all pools that are capable of being filled with more than 300 millimetres of water to be surrounded by a four-sided fence, with a height of 1.2 metres above the ground and there are fines of up to $50,000 for those left unfenced.
Brian Owler, the president of the Australian Medical Association, told Fairfax Media that parents often had a false sense of security with portable pools because they were so easy to buy.
Top Comments
My kids fill up a big plastic laundry type tub with water and play in it.
Do I need to put up a pool fence around this - seriously?
Give me a break.
Under current legislation in WA you actually do have to provide a barrier for a portable pools or for any body of water over 30cm deep . I think the legislation just says that if the pool is not drained and removed it needs a fence unless a parent is within arms reach.
I guess it is more of a "warning" legislation to raise awareness of the dangers rather than something that is actively enforced or rather than a ban.