Sheletta Brundidge's Lock Giveaway Aims to Keep Wandering Kids Safe This Summer
Contributing writer Sheletta Brundidge reports on her nonprofit's upcoming giveaway of 100 free interior combination locks for parents of autistic children, a tool she says stopped her own son, Daniel, from wandering. With autistic children 160 times more likely to drown than their peers, Brundidge explains why summer's disrupted routines make what she calls "drowning season" especially dangerous, and why simple locks can succeed where swim lessons and other safety measures fall short.

It was a happy ending when a St. Paul teen who went missing on Friday, June 26, was reported to be โlocated and safeโ by the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension just two days later.
Thatโs not always the case. โWe call this the drowning season,โ said Sheletta Brundidge, known as the autism mom and founder of ShelettaMakesADifference.org.ย
Brundidge is hosting an interior combination lock giveaway on Saturday July 11, to arm parents with a tool to keep their kids safe. Sheโs hosted many lock giveaways, and nearly all of them have been after the drowning death of an autistic child who wandered.
Brundidge said summer interferes with the routines that are helpful to kids with autism. โEverything is out of whack, and kids are all over the place. When that overstimulation happens, routine changes, schedules shift, and they get extra excited. The next thing you know, they dart out of the house.โ
Brundidge said her youngest, Daniel, was a wanderer. โI was not able to pee or bathe with the door closed for 3 years because he would always try to dart out of the house.โ
For parents of autistic children, the danger is amplified because kids with autism are 160 times more likely to drown than any other group. Brundidge said itโs not as easy as just teaching them to swim. โIf they canโt learn their name and they canโt follow simple commands, itโs almost impossible to teach some of them to swim. And theyโre drawn to water.โ
When Brundidge was in the thick of it with her son Daniel, she tried every type of lock she could find. โCombinations, chains, gates, chirps on the doors. But as he got older, he was able to get through all that stuff.โ
Thatโs when Brundidge picked up an interior combination door lock, available on Amazon, Walmart, and other online retailers for $40 to $50. Each lock is programmed with a 6 to 10-digit code. โLet me tell you, it reprogrammed his mind,โ Brundidge explained. โOne or two weeks of trying to get out of the house, and he stopped. He no longer wanders.โ
Brundidgeโs says the giveaway is an opportunity to get more interior combination locks into the hands of parents of autistic children.
โFor some, the cost is a barrier,โ Brundidge said. By partnering with organizations, Brundidge and her nonprofit ShelettaMakesADifference.org will have 100 free combination interior locks to give away to local families. Not only will parents get locks, but theyโll get peace of mind.
The lock giveaway takes place from 10 a.m. to noon at the Hallie Q Brown Center at 270 N Kent St. in St. Paul. There will also be ice cream, face painting, and balloon animals for kids attending the event.
