Born and raised on Oahu, Catherine Toth Fox is an editor, writer, children鈥檚 book author, blogger and former journalism instructor. She is currently the editor at large for Hawaii Magazine and lives in Honolulu with her husband, son and two dogs. You can follow her on Instagram @catherinetothfox. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.
Funding should continue to provide additional resources for ocean safety.
Sometimes it鈥檚 what we don鈥檛 see that matters most.
This is true for Hawaii鈥檚 lifeguards.
What you don鈥檛 see are the number of rescues that didn鈥檛 happen because of lifeguards. The number of people whose lives were saved because a lifeguard warned them about strong currents, dangerous undertow and unpredictable surf conditions. The number of people who were treated for box jellyfish stings, cuts and other injuries at one of the 42 towers across the island.
Those numbers aren鈥檛 usually reported.
According to city data, 2.2 million beachgoers interacted with a lifeguard on Oahu in 2022. (That鈥檚 roughly 10% of all beachgoers.)
While lifeguards made 2,682 rescues that year, they, more notably, prevented 187,322 people on the beach from doing something unsafe 鈥 something that may have resulted in a rescue, or worse.
鈥淭hese numbers don鈥檛 make the news,鈥 says Honolulu Emergency Medical Services Director Dr. Jim Ireland. 鈥淭hey aren鈥檛 the spectacular rescues because these are the rescues that never happened.鈥
Most of us go to the beach and rarely interact with the lifeguards. We barely even know they鈥檙e there. (That is, until we need them.)
They are the quiet guardians of our beaches, patrolling hundreds of miles of coastline and responding to thousands of distress calls 鈥 and often they鈥檙e the first on the scene.
It may look like the ultimate summer-vacation cruise job 鈥 sitting in a tower overlooking a golden-sand beach, hitting the surf on your lunch break, wearing shorts and a T-shirt all day 鈥 but, trust me, working as a lifeguard isn鈥檛 easy.
Years ago, for fun, I attempted to complete one of the physical fitness requirements to be a city lifeguard: the 1,000/1,000. It鈥檚 a 1,000-yard run on the sand, followed by a 1,000-yard swim in the ocean 鈥斅燼ll under 25 minutes.
This is a physical test that all lifeguards have to do, every year, to keep their jobs. They are the only emergency responders who have to pass an annual physical test.
I was in my best shape, training for sprint triathlons and surfing nearly every day. (I was also much younger, which helps.) I did the course twice at Ala Moana Beach Park 鈥 and I couldn鈥檛 do the course in under 31 minutes.
And that鈥檚 not the only physical test lifeguards have to do. They have to paddle a huge rescue board for 1,000 yards in under 4 minutes and complete a run-swim-run course (100 yards each length) in 3 minutes.
Not to mention they have to go out in dangerous conditions 鈥 pummeling shorebreak, unforgiving swells, chaotic currents 鈥 and save lives.
鈥淭his is unique to lifeguards,鈥 Ireland says. 鈥淵ou have to maintain this physical requirement throughout your whole career. That really is a commitment to fitness and the ability to do your job in difficult conditions.鈥
In addition, many lifeguards are certified emergency medical technicians through a program with Kapiolani Community College. These graduates can provide basic life support to patients in a pre-hospital setting, including treatment of shock, immobilization of fractures and assisting in childbirth.
It鈥檚 important the city continues to fund the Ocean Safety department. Earlier this year the city allocated $22 million to increase the number of lifeguards, their hours of operation and equipment. And in October Mayor Rick Blangiardi approved another $1.3. million to hire even more lifeguards, as the department gears up for the winter surf season.
This will add another 18 new lifeguards to fully implement the dawn-to-dusk mandate, which went into effect in 2021.
That means all 42 towers on Oahu can be staffed from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., with mobile units 鈥 basically lifeguards in trucks 鈥 patrolling beaches that don鈥檛 have towers and providing support to other lifeguards.
The funding also supports installing new towers at beaches that could use them. In August the city opened a lifeguard tower at Kahe Point Beach Park, also known as Electric Beach. It was the first new tower in 11 years. Since it opened the department reported seven rescues and averages 160 preventative actions a day.
The West Oahu beach has grown in popularity in the last 10 years, due to social media posts, snorkeling tours, and the increase of residents and visitors staying in nearby Ko Olina.
鈥淥n the first day of operation, lifeguards did a rescue,鈥 Ireland says. 鈥淎nd we can鈥檛 even tell you how many rescues were prevented because of preventative actions. It鈥檚 shown to be a very, very important (location) and the extended hours are definitely making a difference.鈥
The next location will be Kalama Beach in Kailua 鈥 planned for 2024 鈥 and two more on the North Shore.
The physical presence of lifeguards, especially in preventing people from getting into dangerous situations, makes a huge impact, Ireland adds.
鈥淟ifeguards are unsung heroes,鈥 Ireland says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e the subject-matter experts. They use the beach, they surf the beaches where they work, they really know everything, every current, where the reefs are, where the dangers are, and they have to translate all that information to the public. And sometimes that information is that they shouldn鈥檛 be in the water that day.鈥
And that may be a rescue that didn鈥檛 happen.
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Born and raised on Oahu, Catherine Toth Fox is an editor, writer, children鈥檚 book author, blogger and former journalism instructor. She is currently the editor at large for Hawaii Magazine and lives in Honolulu with her husband, son and two dogs. You can follow her on Instagram @catherinetothfox. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.
Yes! There should be better recognition!! And pay and staffing!
eat_local·
1 year ago
Thank you for this article. We don't have enough water safety personnel in Hawaii. In places like Hanauma Bay, where it's not the waves that are dangerous, the city and county should place lifeguards in the water where most drowning deaths occur. Or maybe we could have lifeguards stay until sundown on all beaches. If you've ever spent time at Sandy Beach you know how many lives are saved by lifeguards patrolling the shoreline and keeping inexperienced tourists out of the water. We are so lucky to have such dedicated public servants, but we need more.
mtf1953·
1 year ago
If this is so, why aren't HPD, HFD & EMT not taking these physical tests?
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