Next wave in rescues: Remote-control 'lifeguards'


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Updated: 8/17/2012 3:40 pm | Published: 8/17/2012 3:39 pm
MICHELLE R. SMITH
Associated Press

WESTERLY, R.I. (AP) - A new and relatively inexpensive device could change the way you think about lifeguards.

EMILY is the acronym for a new remote-controlled lifeguard. It stands for Emergency Integrated Lifesaving Lanyard.

It's a small watercraft fitted with a flotation device and can go up to 22 mph, allowing it to get to people more quickly, and in some cases more safely, than any human.

It's being used by a handful of communities, including in Los Angeles County, home of the lifeguards made famous by the TV series "Baywatch."

If a swimmer is struggling, a lifeguard or anyone else can put EMILY in the water and send it through even rough waves with the help of a remote control.

EMILY made its first rescue last month when it saved a father and son in Oregon.

(Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)


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