Patrols
help reduce Golden Gate suicide rate
December 30, 1996
Web posted at: 6:30 a.m. EST
From Correspondent, Susan Reed
SAN FRANCISCO (CNN) -- For most people, the Golden Gate
Bridge is one of the world's most memorable tourist attractions,
a landmark as easily identifiable as New York's Statue of
Liberty or Paris' Eiffel Tower.
But for others, the historic span represents a much darker
destination. They come to the scenic bridge to commit suicide
by leaping into the cold, choppy waters of San Francisco
Bay.
Since the 1.7-mile-long suspension bridge connecting Marin
County to San Francisco opened in 1937, more than 1,000
people have jumped to their deaths from the Golden Gate.
But the rate
has dropped dramatically since April 1, when the Golden
Gate Bridge Patrol began monitoring the bridge as part of
a $111,300 pilot suicide prevention program.
Every day, from dawn to dusk, a patrolman on a scooter drives
back and forth across the Golden Gate, his only mission
to stop potential jumpers before it's too late.
"They move
differently than you or I would move," said Lt. Lou
Garcia. "When you pass by them, you try, what I try
to do ... is to get their slightest attention so they look
at me. If they don't, I elevate my attention."
That attention
seems to be working. In 1995, at least 45 people used the
bridge as a platform for suicide, the highest in its 59-year
history. But since the patrols began, there have been just
24 fatal jumps.
The patrol workers
study all people on the bridge, looking for clues to identify
potential jumpers from among the tourists. They note the
way people walk, the way they hold their heads, what they're
looking at, whether they have cameras.
Inevitable Jumps
Still, there
are suicides. And they're tough on the bridge patrolmen.
"The guy gets out of the car, goes to the rail and
goes over," said Bridge Capt. Ronald Garcia of one
memorable and tragic suicide. "(The) officer got the
guy's hand, but he was already over the rail. And he just
said, 'Tell everybody I love 'em' and left. That's very
hard on somebody." Suicide prevention authorities believe
many people can be talked out of jumping.
"We've
talked to people who have jumped and survived the fall,"
said John Vidaurri of San Francisco Suicide Prevention.
"And most of them have said once they leave the platform
of the bridge, they've regretted jumping off."
But so far,
the Golden Gate Bridge Patrol has done a good job of stopping
things from getting that far. Since April, according to
a report released earlier this month, patrol workers have
prevented as many as 34 potential jumpers fro
|