Emergency crews and rescue personnel needed hours to free two of
young Ashlyn's fingers when they got trapped in a piece of playground
equipment last March at Mount Olive Elementary School in March.
The county's Risk Management Department then came up with a way to prevent a similar situation from happening again.
But Knox County Schools declined to act on the recommendation.
That's not the first time school officials have opted not to fix a potential problem on school playgrounds.
PREVIOUS STORY: Part 1 - School Playground Safety Inspection Inconsistencies
Parents said officials promised to address safety issues on some playgrounds, but have failed to deliver.
"It's
one thing to fall and get hurt, but if you have something that poses a
risk that could be fixed, then that's different," said Ashyln's mother
Micki Morris. "Kids are going to fall – you can't change that. But if
you have something that is a known hazard now, I think it's wrong not to
fix it."
Barbara Kistler-Martin, whose son was injured in May when a piece of mulch pierced his shoe and foot, agreed.
"It
is correctable," she said, noting that the mulch at Cedar Bluff
Elementary where her son was injured this summer looks the same today.
"This just bothers me."
The rest of the story RIGHT HERE.
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