Protecting Portland Children On Halloween
Keep Your Child Safe on Halloween
Halloween is a time for scary stories, and often it’s the grownups getting spooked. Parents hear warnings about stranger danger, razor blades, and LSD in candy bags. There’s even a scientific study on eye injuries from throwing raw eggs. Some folks worry about black cats. But the real danger on Halloween night is one so ordinary it could go unnoticed: motor vehicle traffic.
According to the University of Michigan News Service, children under 15 are 4.5 times more likely to die in a car crash on Halloween than on any other evening of the year, with most deaths occurring between 4 PM and 8 PM – prime trick-or-treating time.
Drunk drivers are a particular menace this time of year, due to alcohol served at Halloween parties. Reuters reports that 58% percent of all Halloween traffic fatalities in the U.S. in 2008 involved a driver with a blood-alcohol content of .08 or higher. These are the same drivers who will be on the road while your children trick-or-treat.
Fortunately, there are a few things you can (mostly) relax about. According to Lenore Skenazy in Free-Range Kids: Giving Our Children the Freedom We Had Without Going Nuts with Worry, there has never been a single report of a child poisoned by Halloween candy given to them by a stranger. Also, sex crimes against preteen children are no higher during Halloween than at any other time of the year, according to a study in Sexual Abuse: A Journal of Research and Treatment. Of course, every parent should be cautious, and it doesn’t hurt to inspect the candy, but don’t waste too much time on oddities; focus on the real dangers, like the four-times-higher risk of a car crash fatality on Halloween.
It is vital to do everything possible to protect your kids from traffic dangers. Here are a few tips:
- Set a good example. If you host or attend a Halloween party, make sure no one drinks and drives.
- Give your children a refresher course in “Stop, Look, and Listen,” which you should also obey.
- When preparing costumes, consider using makeup instead of sight-obscuring masks.
- Have your kids carry flashlights, stay on the sidewalk, and walk in groups.
- Accompany your children, or set a safe route for older kids.
- When driving, use extra caution before and after the Halloween weekend, not just on October 31. Some children may trick-or-treat or have parties on a different day.
- Do not pass a car that stops in front of you. It may be dropping off children.
- Never assume a pedestrian will yield, especially a child.
- Watch for children in driveways and medians, stay off your cell phone, and drive well below the speed limit. Rule of thumb: pretend you’re in a giant school zone.
Sure, it’s fun to listen to scary stories – but it’s not so pleasant to live through one. For children’s sake, take safe driving seriously this Halloween!
Shulman DuBois LLC is a personal injury law firm located in Portland, Oregon, and serves clients in all Oregon cities and counties, including: Portland, Beaverton, Multnomah County, Hillsboro, Gresham, Lake Oswego, West Linn, Tualatin, Troutdale, Sellwood, Corvallis, Salem, Eugene, Milwaukie, and Albany.








