Youngest heroes
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Costa Mesa Fire Department officials on Tuesday praised the quick
thinking and intuition of two young Costa Mesa boys who saved a
little girl from drowning.
Kenneth Ottens, 11, and David Davis, 12, were given the city’s
first citizen rescuer awards for pulling David’s 9-year-old sister,
Jessica, from the Halecrest neighborhood pool Sunday after she nearly
drowned. The Fire Department honored the boys in a ceremony at Fire
Station One.
“To me it’s incredible that he [Kenneth] had the composure,” said
Capt. Curt Yoder. “He jumped right in and went to work.”
Kenneth was swimming in the deep end when he noticed the girl
laying motionless at the bottom of the swimming pool.
“I just thought that I better go and check on her because she
looked like she wasn’t alive,” Kenneth said.
He grabbed her by the leg and pulled her to the surface; Jessica’s
brother David helped him drag her to the side of the pool. Jessica
and her brother are autistic.
Adults called 911 and Jessica’s father, Scott Davis, began
performing CPR with the help of others. Jessica was conscious and
breathing by the time paramedics arrived.
“All I saw was my daughter at the top of the pool -- blue. That’s
all I had to see,” Davis said.
Firefighter paramedic Chris Holmes was first on scene. He said
that the team of community rescuers did all the work, paramedics only
acted as a taxi to the hospital.
“It was all done by the time we got there,” Holmes said.
Jessica was hospitalized and observed as a precaution.
“I was really blue,” Jessica said Tuesday, as she bounced happily
around the fire station.
Jessica’s near-drowning was a scare that followed two drownings in
Newport-Mesa this year. In May, 2-year-old Christian Diaz was found
at the bottom of a Costa Mesa apartment complex swimming pool. Police
said Christian wandered out of an apartment while his mother was
taking a nap.
Taylor Ackroyd, 3, drowned May 5 in a poolside spa in a Newport
Beach condominium complex. Police said his father had left him alone
in the pool area with a teenage sibling for less than 3 minutes.
Drownings can be prevented if parents teach their children water
safety, said Brenda Emrick, of the Costa Mesa Fire Department.
One of the most critical tips is to create barriers, such as
fences, pool covers and gates, between children and water, Emrick
said.
But no barrier can substitute for adult supervision, Emrick said.
“Being aware and paying attention to what’s happening is
important,” Emrick said.
In the case of Sunday’s incident, Jessica was lucky that the
community pool was filled with responsible people who knew how to
handle the emergency, Emrick said.
Kenneth’s stint as a lifesaver may have inspired a future career
path; he’s already planning to take CPR classes.
“I’ve always wanted to be a firefighter,” Kenneth said.
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