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Newborn surrendered in Safe Haven box at Ind. fire station

Clarksville Fire Chief Brandon Skaggs praised the parent for leaving the baby in safe hands

clarksville fire department baby box safe haven indiana

A healthy newborn was surrendered in a Safe Haven box at the Clarksville Fire Department station on Saturday. The box was first installed and opened to the public in October 2020.

Photo/Clarksville Fire Department

The Evening News and the Tribune, Jeffersonville, Ind.

CLARKSVILLE, Ind. — A healthy newborn baby was safely, legally and anonymously surrendered in a Safe Haven Baby Box at a Clarksville fire station Sunday morning.

“On the morning of May 2, 2021, a beautiful newborn baby was safely surrendered to the Clarksville Fire Department’s Safe Haven Baby Box,” Fire Chief Brandon Skaggs said. “The parent or parents of the child made a choice based on love and grace! With a dedicated team and available resources this choice has provided hope, love, and a life for this child.”

The baby box was dedicated and made available to the public in October 2020.

The way it works is that a parent who has made the difficult decision to surrender an infant places the child in a secure space that can be opened from outside. A silent alarm alerts firefighters that a baby is present, and they can immediately remove the infant from the space and contact the proper channels, the News and Tribune previously reported.

The program was born out of Indiana’s Safe Haven Law, enacted in 2000, which allows parents to anonymously surrender a child 30 days old or younger without facing prosecution. Surrendering the child is likely a last-resort option for parents, and other avenues for help are available, including a 24-hour crisis hotline and adoption assistance.

Monica Kelsey, the founder of Safe Haven Baby Boxes, said of the baby surrender in Clarksville, “This mother loved this child, and it takes a very special person to want what’s best for a child and know that it’s not her. That’s the ultimate act of selflessness. I’m so thankful she chose a safe place to surrender her child and not in a dumpster or trash can like we see too many times.”

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(c)2021 The Evening News and The Tribune (Jeffersonville, Ind.)

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