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Mr. Jesse’s discussion switched to two accidents that <br />occurred on a Friday night skate, one being a tooth <br />knocked out, and one a possible concussion. To my way of <br />thinking, that’s a Rescue Squad call, and it’s the Squad’s <br />call. The Squad wasn’t called on either of the accidents, <br />and to his way of thinking, they should have been called, <br />rather than Rec Center supervision or Rec Center staff. <br />The parents were contacted at that point, and the one parent <br />said to the effect, “let them keep skating,” and the other <br />parent said to put the tooth in milk and he’d see if he could <br />get it reattached. Procedure is the issue. Having a <br />Commissioner in place will address some of the above <br />issues. First aid kits are regularly serviced, and we need <br />(have) defribulators (sp?) in place. Red Cross training is <br />done, but the point is that the Squad should be called for <br />many incidents. <br /> <br />Procedure needs to be clear. Mr. Limpert noted that now it <br />is clear. Every full time employee has had at least a crash <br />course, and they have been informed about where it’s <br />supposed to be. Mr. Jesse said that All training will be <br />done with the existing supervisors <br />and (Members of Commission interjections) just call the <br />Squad to be on the safe side, considering the nature of <br />many of the injuries. <br /> <br />The last item on Mr. Jesse’s report was further discussion <br />among the Commission members regarding times and <br />Page 7 <br /> <br />