Tom Conning (left), Northwestern Division public affairs specialist, talks about water safety to Heather Roberts, freelance journalist, during a boat tour on the Willamette River in Oregon, Aug. 18, 2022. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) is among the largest providers of water-based outdoor recreation in the nation. Because of that, USACE emphasizes water safety and life jacket wear, especially during the summer season.

Tom Conning is a public affairs specialist for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) and these views are his own. He also believes sarcasm and dark humor will resonate more with the intended audience.


Every year, USACE publishes updated statistics for water safety (or lack thereof) at its project locations throughout the country. In the eight years I’ve been working for USACE, the statistics on drownings have not significantly changed (that I can recall), regardless of the amount of focus and messaging the enterprise has published. Again, it’s no surprise that USACE data from 2023 shows that drowning victims at our locations are 88 percent male and 89 percent who weren’t wearing life jackets.


This is an important topic for many of our staff in the natural resources management (NRM) field but our primary message about wearing life jackets in and around water doesn’t appear to be resonating with men. Why? Probably because us men (yes, us – I’m in the middle of the worst offenders of this demographic) are good swimmers, strong, capable, manly and … men (I get the irony of me man-splaining this). The attitude most adult (18-60-year-old) men have is why I’ve typically been ambivalent about trying to help the NRM field communicate about this topic. For the past three years, I (since I’m manly and can accomplish anything) have approached this challenge a bit differently (as I hope you can tell by the tone of this commentary). I’ve increased the focus of speaking directly to the demographic that needs to hear these things the most.

In 2021, I wrote, “last year, 27 Oregonians died in recreational boating-related incidents – the most in three decades.” In 2022, I was more direct, saying “men, especially between 17-65 years of age, are the worst about wearing life jackets due to several things, including their arrogance about swimming abilities.” Last year, I ended up saying, “men are especially arrogant about their swimming abilities and strength.”


Not that it’s helped as men within this age group continue to drown.


If you do some research (which I did), you will see that men are pretty good at killing ourselves accidentally. According to the National Safety Council statistics (from 2021), men make up the majority of most deaths that we could likely avoid if we weren’t so, cool, macho, strong, etc. For instance: