Misplaced Pages

Open Water Wisdom

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Royal Life Saving Society Canada , commonly known as the Lifesaving Society or LSS , is a Canadian registered charity that works to prevent water-related injuries through various programs across Canada. The Lifesaving Society is an independent organization that is composed of ten provincial/territorial branches, tens of thousands of individual members, and over 4,000 affiliated swimming pools, waterfronts, schools and clubs. The Society helps prevent drowning and aquatic injury through its training programs, public education, drowning-prevention research, safety management and overseeing the sport of lifesaving . They are one of five nationally recognized first aid training organizations in Canada, alongside the Heart and Stroke Foundation , Red Cross , St. John Ambulance , and the Canadian Ski Patrol .

#38961

7-516: Open Water Wisdom is a community water activity safety program that was spearheaded by The Royal Life Saving Society of Canada and The Canadian Red Cross . It is dedicated to bringing awareness to recreational water safety issues nationally and in hundreds of remote communities across Canada. Children and youth are at higher risk for water injury and drowning , most especially in Canada’s remote northern, rural, Aboriginal and coastal communities. This

14-476: Is partly because many of Canada’s communities sit next to open water and at most times of the year the water is cold. There are also indications that several cultural issues can contribute to higher drowning rates in some parts of the country. In 2011, Lifesaving Canada and The Canadian Red Cross were given funding by The Public Health Agency of Canada in support of the Open Water Wisdom initiative. In 2012,

21-690: The Society's swimming, lifesaving, lifeguard and leadership training programs. The Lifesaving Society is incorporated in Canada under the name "The Royal Life Saving Society Canada/La Société Royale de Sauvetage Canada", and it has branches for every province and territory. The Lifesaving Society represents Canada in the International Life Saving Federation and the Royal Life Saving Society Commonwealth . The Society sets

28-507: The campaign released several national radio Public Service Announcements about how to stay safe around open water during summer months. The campaign has targeted over 250 communities across the country, with a special focus on youth 19 years of age or younger. Open Water Wisdomʼs activities are rooted in providing local community champions with lifejackets and resource training kits about cold water safety issues. Local champions provide water activity safety training to their communities based on

35-681: The establishment in 1908 of the Ontario Branch as the first Canadian branch of the Royal Life Saving Society UK . The Ontario branch of the RLSS was founded on December 10, 1908, with J. Howard Crocker as a charter member. Crocker introduced RLSS to the YMCA curriculum, and served as president of the Ontario branch of the RLSS from 1934 to 1937. Annually, over one million Canadians take part in

42-448: The materials and resources supplied to participating communities. The official objectives of the campaign are to: Royal Life Saving Society of Canada The Royal Life Saving Society arrived in Canada in 1894 with its Honorary Representative, Arthur Lewis Cochrane , who joined the faculty of Upper Canada College in Toronto as a "Drill Instructor". The Society became formalized with

49-596: The standards for aquatic safety in Canada and certifies Canada's National Lifeguards . The Society is the Canadian governing body for the sport of lifesaving , which is recognized by the International Olympic Committee and the Commonwealth Games Federation . Lifesaving Society certifications include: The Lifesaving Society also trains coaches and officials for lifesaving sport. In 2012,

#38961