Learning the lines
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A strong breeze gave temporary relief from the noontime heat for
children crowded on a Newport Harbor dock Wednesday, as they waited
for a red Harbor Patrol firefighting boat.
It was a perfect day for sailing and for these children, a welcome
break from the scenery of a motel on Harbor Boulevard, where many of
the children and their families are full-time residents.
A day of boating and water safety education for these children is
the result of a pilot program started by the Balboa Yacht Club, in
partnership with the Orange County Sheriff’s Harbor Patrol and
Mariner’s Church in Irvine.
“An outing like this is really a big thing for them,” said club
member Alan Oleson, who helps coordinate the program.
Mariner’s Church has been working with children at the Costa Mesa
Motor Inn for nine years as part of the Miracles in Motion program,
said Sheree King, of Mariner’s Church.
The children spend a day at the yacht club, sailing and eating
lunch on the terrace, then go next door to learn about water safety
from the Harbor Patrol.
The program started when some of the club’s junior members
expressed a desire to give back to the community, said club member
Tom Purcell.
Wednesday’s event was the third day that Mariner’s Church has
brought children to spend a day at the harbor. Some children have
been before; others are having a first-time boating experience, said
Balboa Yacht Club sailing director Ben Benjamin.The children receive
some basic sailing instruction when they go out on the club’s boats,
but it’s more like a cruise. The point is to give them the experience
of being out on the water, Benjamin said.
Harbor Patrol Sheriff’s Deputies Steve Shandrick and Brad Lofland
parked the Harbor Patrol boat next to the dock and explained what
they do.
“We catch bad guys that are out here on the water doing wrong
things,” Lofland told the children.
The deputies showed off the safety equipment -- such as an
automatic defibrillator and an oxygen pack -- they carry onboard.
When yacht club members took the program idea to the Harbor
Patrol, they willingly became involved, Benjamin said.
“They’re getting a positive image of law enforcement,” Oleson
said.
King made a special point to ask the deputies how education played
a role in their career choices. Each has a college degree --
Shandrick in geography and aeronautical engineering and Lofland in
marine biology.
“For you kids, a high school degree isn’t going to make it anymore
in the workforce,” Lofland said. “Education is the key.”
* LAUREN VANE covers public safety and courts. She may be reached
at (714) 966-4618 or at [email protected].
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