Dedicated in loving memory to

April Lynne Cox

APRIL

Your eyes were like magic, your smile like gold.
Though you were only a baby you were strong and bold.
Your giggle was inspiring and it brightened everybody’s day,
but now that you’re gone; What can I say?
I love you and I’ll miss you each and every day.
But April, I will always love you and you will always in my heart.
It is so hard to let go of your sweet little face.

I’ll always remember you, please remember me too.
You’ve touched all of our hearts in a warm and special way.
Even though you were here only a short time
you had a warm heart and a special soul that no one but you could have.
April, you were the prettiest baby on earth
and you will be the prettiest baby angel when you reach heaven.
Don’t forget the loving family that you had
and we will never forget you.
So save us a place in the choir and wait for me.
For me it will seem like eternity, for you, a short while.

I love you April and I always will.
You were a special baby with a special soul
that had no sins. You were “The Perfect Angel.”

Love,
Rebecca

April's story is graciously shared with us by her mother,Valerie and her grandmother,Kathy.

April Lynne Cox was born on March 29, 2001 and died on May 27, 2002 She was an inquisitive little girl who was strangled by only 12 inches of the “inner” or “lift” cord in a set of mini blinds.

This danger occurs when a corded blind or shade is lowered, but not locked into position leaving a small amount of slack in the inner cord. Infants have reportedly been able to grasp and pull the slackened cord into their crib and around their necks. It is believed that at least 15 other children have been accidentally strangled on the inner cords of window coverings since 1991.

These facts have been reported by the Window Covering Safety Council (who even knew there was a safety council?) April’s death could have and should have been prevented simply by making these facts public knowledge.

All blinds manufactured after September 15, 2000 have been redesigned to eliminate inner-cord slack. Additional warning labels will be placed on all blinds manufactured before that date but that are still in retail stock. So, if this knowledge has been known for the past 11 years why did another innocent child have to die to make parents aware of this potential danger.

For more information or for a free safety kit you can click on the link or contact the WCSC at 1-800-506-4636.

Don’t let April’s death be in vain. Let’s help to save our children. Please forward this message on to everyone you know.

Sincerely,

Kathy Hall
April’s grandmother

Anchorage Daily News
(Published: July 1, 2002)
When Valerie Rountree moved into her parents' Anchorage home this winter, she tied up the pull cord for the window blinds so her toddler daughter, April, couldn't get hold of it and hurt herself.

Then she put April's crib next to the window, away from the pull cord. She thought that was best, considering the heater was nearby and would keep her daughter warm. But Rountree, like many parents, didn't know that putting April near the window also meant putting her within reach of yet another hazard of older window blinds. On some, the inner cord that runs down the middle of the blinds through the slats can be pulled out. Children can wrap the slack cord around their necks and suffocate.

Web sites talk about the problem, even advertise free repair kits to fix the faulty blinds. But how many parents know about those sites or hear about the problem elsewhere, Rountree wondered.

"You're not warned about it, and nobody knows about it," she said. Rountree didn't learn about the danger until it was too late. On the morning of Memorial Day, Rountree thought her daughter was sleeping. But April had woken up, pulled out the inner cord in the blinds and strangled herself. At 14 months old, the little girl who had just started saying "Hello" and singing "Itsy Bitsy Spider," had died.

THAT MORNING
Rountree woke up about 8:30 that morning and checked on her daughter. April had dropped her bottle behind the crib, so Rountree pulled the crib away from the window, retrieved the stray bottle and filled it with milk.

She returned and gave it to April. She checked on her daughter again and thought she was sleeping. Rountree said she went to her own bed and fell back asleep, too. That was the last time she saw her daughter alive.

Around 10:30 a.m., Rountree said, she awoke again and found her 6-year-old daughter, Morgan, watching television. She asked Morgan if April was still sleeping, and Morgan replied that April had gotten stuck in the side of the crib and had passed out. Not realizing the seriousness of the situation, she hadn't informed her mother until asked.

Rountree ran to April's room and found her squatting in the crib with her head tilted to the side. About 12 inches of the inner cord from the blinds was wrapped around her neck. Rountree had no idea how long her daughter had been struggling.

"I ran in there and I pulled the cord off," she said. Her baby fell over onto her side. "I put my hand on her and check to see if she was breathing, and she wasn't," Rountree said. She pounded on bedroom doors to see who was home. Christopher Cox, the baby's father, was out of town, and Rountree's parents had gone shopping. But Rountree's brother was home and he started cardiopulmonary resuscitation.

Rountree called 911. The paramedics took April to Providence Alaska Medical Center. Rountree and her brother followed. Doctors tried to get April's heart beating, but nothing worked.

PREVENTION

April Cox is one of more than 100 American children who've died in the past decade because of an accident with blinds.

Between 1991 and 2000, 114 were strangled by the outer pull cords and 16 died because of the inner cords, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

The number of reported deaths caused blinds manufacturers and retailers to take action. In the mid-1990s, the industry formed a group called the Window Covering Safety Council.

Manufacturers started changing the blinds to make them safer, said Peter Rush, the safety council's executive director.

Until 1995, traditional blinds had a potentially dangerous loop at the bottom of the outer pull cord. Manufacturers started removing the loop. When they realized the inner cords were a problem, the companies started making blinds with special attachments that prevent those cords from forming a loop.

"The industry is doing the right thing by making the new window blinds safer, but what do you do with all of those old ones?" asked Ken Giles, spokesman for the Consumer Product Safety Commission. "There are millions of old window blinds out there."

The Window Covering Safety Council has some ideas. Rush said parents should never put cribs by windows, where children can reach shades or blinds.

When Rountree moved into her parents' home, the blinds were already in her baby's bedroom. When moving into a new home, parents should check the blinds to see if they are older models and have the dangerous features.

"Check to make certain that you have no looped (pull) cords," Rush said. "If you do have looped cords, cut them."

Another potential problem is the continuous loop cord seen on some blinds and drapes. If blinds have such a pull cord, the owners should mount the pull system on the wall or tie it down on the floor, Giles said.

The third problem is the one that killed April. Inner cords that can be pulled out by children must be fixed so they cannot be removed.

The Window Covering Safety Council has free kits to fix inner cords, the looped outer pull cords as well as the continuous looped cords. Parents should call the council's toll-free number, 1-800-506-4636, or visit its Web site at www.windowcoverings.org.

Rountree called the Better Business Bureau to ask about the company that made the blinds in April's bedroom. Rountree wouldn't identify the manufacturer because she's considering a lawsuit. She hopes a lawsuit will force the company to fix the problem and put a better warning label on the blinds.

Rountree's trying to help by checking people's blinds to make sure they're aware of the problem. And she's taken the blinds off the windows at home. "I'll never have them again," she said.

Reporter Ann Potempa can be reached at...... apotempa@adn.com or 907 257-4581.

Please take a moment to visit Valerie's website for her daughter at.... For April