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After many years of advocacy, suicide deterrent lastly involves the Golden Gate Bridge : NPR

A chrome steel security internet sits under the sidewalk on the Golden Gate Bridge on Jan. 5, 2024, to discourage folks from leaping and to catch those that do.

Beth LaBerge/KQED


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Beth LaBerge/KQED


A chrome steel security internet sits under the sidewalk on the Golden Gate Bridge on Jan. 5, 2024, to discourage folks from leaping and to catch those that do.

Beth LaBerge/KQED

Michael James Bishop left his condominium on Pine Avenue in San Francisco round 8:45 a.m. on March 28, 2011. He drove his grey Honda to the parking zone on the Golden Gate Bridge. He scrawled an in depth suicide observe and laid it on his automotive seat.

The solar was shining for the primary time in weeks. It was 51 levels exterior. The 28-year-old with brown curly hair, inexperienced eyes and silver-rimmed glasses stepped out of his automotive and walked to the center of the bridge. Then Bishop turned towards San Francisco and leapt.

“A motorist who was driving by occurred to see my son go over the rail,” says Kay James, Bishop’s mom.

When James acquired a name from the sheriff she was shocked. “That he would kill himself – by no means entered my thoughts. He was so candy. He was a really light younger man.”

Her son had loads going for him. He was in a relationship with a lady he adored. He performed the violin in an orchestra. He was on faucet to begin a brand new job at an environmental fund. The truth is, that deadly day was speculated to be his first day at work.

However he’d struggled with despair previously, and he was overwhelmed. The suicide observe stated, “I am so sorry. I simply can’t deal with issues.”

Kay James sits in her house in Moraga on Jan. 9, 2024. Her son Michael Bishop died leaping off of the Golden Gate Bridge in 2011.

Beth LaBerge/KQED


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Kay James sits in her house in Moraga on Jan. 9, 2024. Her son Michael Bishop died leaping off of the Golden Gate Bridge in 2011.

Beth LaBerge/KQED

“I simply felt so devastated,” says James. “You are feeling like your world is coming to an finish.”

Her son’s pc historical past revealed that he had researched the Golden Gate Bridge. It is an iconic landmark, however it’s additionally a deadly one. About 2,000 individuals are estimated to have plunged to their dying since 1937 – a mean of about two folks a month. Suicide prevention advocates have pushed for a deterrent for many years.

Now, after years of conferences and delays, their desires are a actuality.

On a crisp clear day in early January, Denis Mulligan, the overall supervisor for the group that oversees the bridge, leans out over the guardrail and factors down at reddish orange beams connecting stainless-steel silver internet that appears like chain hyperlink fencing. It is suspended 20 toes under the pedestrian walkway. Mulligan says it would harm if somebody jumps – it is the identical marine grade materials used to carry the mast of sailboats in place.

“It is one thing that is made for this harsh surroundings,” he says. “It isn’t smooth. It isn’t springy. It is like a large cheese grater.”

The online extends 1.7 miles down each the west and east sides of the bridge. Mulligan says it is 95 % full.

Employees set up a stainless-steel security internet under the sidewalk on the Golden Gate Bridge on Jan. 8, 2024. The online is designed to discourage folks from leaping and to catch those that do.

Beth LaBerge/KQED


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Beth LaBerge/KQED


Employees set up a stainless-steel security internet under the sidewalk on the Golden Gate Bridge on Jan. 8, 2024. The online is designed to discourage folks from leaping and to catch those that do.

Beth LaBerge/KQED

“It is a large endeavor,” says Mulligan. “Now we have over seven soccer fields price of netting stretched out on the Golden Gate Bridge.”

None of which you’ll be able to see from the roadway. Mulligan says the general public didn’t need the online to detract from the bridge’s magnificence; it was a main level of rivalry through the design section.

“Public feedback from households who had misplaced a cherished one stated, ‘In the event you had constructed one thing, my little one would nonetheless be alive.’ Whereas others stated, ‘Do not you dare change how the bridge appears to be like,'” says Mulligan.

Lastly, he says, the Golden Gate Bridge board concluded that they’d construct one thing if another person paid for it. Federal freeway grants lined the $224 million value to assemble the suicide barrier.

The beautiful location is usually regarded as one cause why folks bounce from the magnificent construction into the crashing waves under. However psychological well being specialists say the view isn’t the draw, as an alternative, accessibility and familiarity are the first drivers.

“Individuals who have tried suicide will say that they felt extra comfy with a given methodology,” says Matthew Nock, professor and chair of the Division of Psychology at Harvard College. “They’re comfy with leaping off a bridge, whereas they had been afraid to hold themselves, or take an overdose or they did not have entry to a firearm.”

A flower slicing lays on a stainless-steel security internet under the sidewalk on the Golden Gate Bridge on Jan. 8, 2024, designed to discourage folks from leaping and to catch those that do.

Beth LaBerge/KQED


cover caption

toggle caption

Beth LaBerge/KQED


A flower slicing lays on a stainless-steel security internet under the sidewalk on the Golden Gate Bridge on Jan. 8, 2024, designed to discourage folks from leaping and to catch those that do.

Beth LaBerge/KQED

“The Golden Gate Bridge is the right goal,” says Mel Blaustein, a psychiatrist at St. Mary’s Medical Heart in San Francisco who has researched bridge suicides for a few years. “There is a parking zone, and there is a bus that takes you there. It is easy and quick. And once I say quick, it takes 4 seconds to hit the water.”

One jumper reportedly left a observe on the bridge studying, “Why do you make it really easy?”

The online is meant to make folks rethink their determination. Some opponents to the mission argued that individuals would simply go some place else to kill themselves. However the analysis doesn’t illustrate that. A U.C. Berkeley examine adopted folks after that they had been stopped on the bridge throughout a suicide try. The overwhelming majority didn’t go on to die by suicide some place else, even years later.

“There’s fairly common settlement that if we all know that individuals are going to attempt to kill themselves by leaping off a particular bridge then it is moral, affordable, and clinically smart to place up a netting and forestall these suicides as a result of some proportion of parents who’re deterred are by no means going to attempt to kill themselves once more,” says Nock.

Images of Kay James and her son Michael Bishop hold on the wall of her house in Moraga on Jan. 9, 2024. Bishop died leaping off of the Golden Gate Bridge in 2011.

Beth LaBerge/KQED


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Beth LaBerge/KQED


Images of Kay James and her son Michael Bishop hold on the wall of her house in Moraga on Jan. 9, 2024. Bishop died leaping off of the Golden Gate Bridge in 2011.

Beth LaBerge/KQED

Kay James wished a internet would have deterred her son Michael. She has talked to individuals who survived suicide makes an attempt on the Golden Gate Bridge. They advised her they regretted their determination the minute they let go of the guardrail.

“That is actually exhausting for me as a result of I feel, ‘If solely he would have had a second probability. And naturally, with a internet, you positively have a second probability.'”

In the event you or somebody you recognize could also be contemplating suicide or is in disaster, name or textual content 988 to achieve the Suicide & Disaster Lifeline.

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