
An unsupervised toddler wandered out of a relative鈥檚 house and into the backyard, where a swimming pool was set up with a seat, a concrete slab, and other items nearby.
It remains unclear exactly how Aromaia Morehu Leoni Duff got into the temporary pool, but she was spotted soon after by her mother, who ran frantically to her and tried to save her.
Despite CPR efforts by the woman, and emergency service personnel soon after, Aromaia, 20 months old, couldn鈥檛 be saved.
The tragedy has now sparked further concerns by a coroner and Water Safety New Zealand (WSNZ) about the rise in popularity and use of temporary swimming pools.
Aromaia鈥檚 death is the fifth involving a temporary pool since 2014.
In findings released today, Coroner Heidi Wrigley reaffirmed WSNZ鈥檚 assertion that there was an 鈥渆merging pattern of drownings鈥 involving the pools.
The drownings also aligned with an increase in supply and affordability of the pools, which were popping up in the backyards of more and more Kiwis鈥 properties.
WSNZ acknowledged the proliferation and urged Kiwis to either fence the pools or empty them immediately after use.
Earlier this year, Coroner Mike Robb called for the sale of temporary pools under 1.2m to be banned, and recommended that higher pools only be sold with an appropriate safety-gated entry.
But banning the pools was still a complicated issue for the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE), which, in Coroner Wrigley鈥檚 findings, acknowledged the importance of temporary pools not being used by young families.
鈥楴o more than 15 minutes鈥
According to the findings, Aromaia, her siblings, and parents were temporarily living at her grandmother鈥檚 home in Napier in March 2023 after their own home was affected by Cyclone Gabrielle.
There were 14 people living at the house at the time, a situation described by the grandmother as 鈥渃haotic鈥.
A Bestway Steel Pro temporary pool, 12 feet in diameter and 76cm high, had been set up in the backyard about two months earlier by a previous boarder.
Coroner Heidi Wrigley has released her findings into the death of Aromaia Morehu Leoni Duff.
Aromaia鈥檚 grandmother told the coroner she had planned to take it down the weekend after the toddler died, as part of a clean-up project.
On the day of her death, Aromaia was in the lounge with her mother, while her father was outside in a hammock on his phone.
Her mother then went to the bathroom, leaving the toddler with her 4-year-old brother.
The coroner said there was no evidence that she had asked the girl鈥檚 father to watch her.
Her mother was out of the room for 鈥渘o more than 15 minutes鈥, while the girl鈥檚 father didn鈥檛 hear his daughter leave the house or enter the pool.
When Aromaia鈥檚 mother got to the back door, she saw her in the pool.
She immediately ran outside, yelling and screaming, and grabbed her daughter, only to find her unresponsive.
The woman began CPR, which was continued by an off-duty paramedic and firefighters, but the child was unable to be saved.
When police arrived at the property, officers found multiple children鈥檚 toys, plastic deck furniture, and other furniture 鈥渟cattered about鈥, including a high-backed plastic outdoor chair about 1.5m to 2m from the pool.
Directly beside the pool was a long concrete slab positioned on top of cinder blocks, about 2m in length, and 30cm to 40cm from the edge of the swimming pool.
Water Safety New Zealand acting chief executive Gavin Walker has concerns the country鈥檚 water statistics are heading backward. Photo / WSNZ
The concrete slab was about 10cm shorter than the top of the pool. Also near it, and at the same height, was one of three flexible tubes, likely for water supply.
Aromaia鈥檚 parents did not wish to be interviewed by police any further about how she might have entered the pool, the findings stated.
鈥楢 tragedy waiting to happen鈥
Coroner Wrigley found that Aromaia had made her way outside by an open sliding door.
鈥淚n the absence of fencing ... and the availability of multiple lightweight items that could be used to climb up the side of the pool meant that Aromaia鈥檚 drowning was a tragedy waiting to happen,鈥 she said.
鈥淎s I expect Aromaia鈥檚 family are painfully aware, her death was preventable in multiple ways.鈥
She said that included closing the external door, her mother 鈥渆xplicitly鈥 handing over responsibility for her supervision to the girl鈥檚 father, and having a temporary fence set up around the pool.
The coroner said unfenced temporary pools posed a 鈥済rave hazard鈥.
She recommended that unfenced pools 鈥渟hould never be in operation when young children are around due to the challenge of the constant and close supervision which is necessary to manage the risk of them drowning鈥.
Water Safety NZ says any portable pool deeper than 400mm is subject to the same fencing rules as in-ground pools, and should have a fence at least 1.2m high. Image / WSNZ
鈥淔illed unfenced temporary pools between 40cm and 1.2m in height can be extremely dangerous for young children ... due to their high risk of quickly and silently drowning in them when not being constantly and closely supervised.鈥
She hoped the recommendation could prevent further deaths.
The coroner made inquiries with WSNZ, MBIE, and Plunket about a possible collaborative approach to promoting awareness.
However, WSNZ said it was a charitable organisation with limited funding, while MBIE indicated it had engaged with both groups to raise awareness of pool barrier requirements.
A backyard hazard
WSNZ acting chief executive Gavin Walker told 九一星空无限 that many well-meaning Kiwis were buying the pools but underestimating their danger.
He was 鈥渘ervous鈥 about the trend of deaths that was beginning to unravel as the availability of the pools, particularly over the past five years, increased.
鈥淓ssentially, we鈥檙e putting that risk or hazard back in people鈥檚 backyards.鈥
He supported Coroner Robb鈥檚 earlier call for a ban on the pools, as trying to get Kiwis to put a fence around them, or spend thousands on a building consent, was unrealistic.
Nor did he think people would empty it after a day鈥檚 use, given the cost of having to fill it up.
Twenty years ago nine children were drowning a year. It was currently fewer than two.
鈥淪o we have these things, for really good reason, being put in people鈥檚 backyards, and what we鈥檙e concerned about is, we鈥檙e starting to see young people drownings on the increase again after 20 years of next to nothing,鈥 Walker said.
鈥淲e鈥檙e really worried that we鈥檙e going to be back in a situation where we鈥檙e losing a reasonable number of young kids to drowning, and it鈥檚 easily foreseeable.
鈥淲e鈥檙e just trying to call that out, we鈥檙e not trying to be the fun police.鈥
Belinda Feek is an Open Justice reporter based in Waikato. She has worked at 九一星空无限 for 10 years and has been a journalist for 21.
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