Tuesday, August 7, 2007

~Another follow up~


Daughter’s death sets off father’s crusade


Accident spurs legislative action


By Todd Murphy


The Portland Tribune, Aug 11, 2006


It has been more than seven years since he lost her, his only daughter.


But it still feels like yesterday, Phil Ellenbecker says. So every night, and on most weekends, there’s a good chance the Verona, Wis., telecommunications engineer is in front of his computer at home.


Checking one more criminal court case. Finding one more news article. Talking to one more reporter from some distant newspaper. And putting another new Web link, another new warning, onto the Web site he created to monitor and dog an industry he thinks cavalierly exploits and throws away vulnerable young adults, such as his daughter, to make a buck.


"It’s something that never leaves you, you know," Ellenbecker says, talking about losing a child — in his case, his 18-year-old daughter, Malinda Turvey. "What I’ve tried to do over the years is focus my anger and my pain and my energy toward stopping these people."


Turvey was one of seven agents from a traveling magazine sales crew killed in a van accident outside Janesville, Wis., in March 1999, when a driver for the crew tried to switch places with a passenger while the van was traveling 80 miles per hour down an interstate highway.


The driver, who had a suspended license and a bad driving record, had spotted a patrol officer. He lost control of the van, which rolled several times. Twelve sales agents were ejected from the vehicle.


The driver of the van pleaded guilty to reckless homicide. The owner of the magazine sales company was sentenced to three and a half years of incarceration on charges related to the accident.


While the Wisconsin accident was one of the most horrific, it was only one of a number of fatal accidents involving magazine sales crews in which reckless, drunken or sleepy drivers or poorly maintained vehicles were to blame.


And for his daughter’s death and the others, Ellenbecker blames an entire industry that, he says, routinely exploits young agents, working them long hours while paying them $20 or less a day, caring little about their safety and in some cases actually allowing crew managers to physically and sexually assault them.


"If I had my way, I’d herd them up and dump them into the ocean — every one of them," he says of the people who own and run the magazine sales crews.


Web sites raise awareness


Ellenbecker’s focus during the past several years has been twofold. One is to create and update Web sites — especially www.travelingsalescrews.info — that detail, monitor and chronicle the industry’s problems and problem companies.


The other has been to lobby the Wisconsin Legislature to make changes in state law that would make it more difficult for the magazine sales crews to operate in that state.


A bill in last year’s Wisconsin Legislature — which Ellenbecker helped champion and which was called Malinda’s Traveling Sales Crew Protection Act — won unanimous approval in the state Senate but was stalled in a committee of the other house, the state Assembly.


Ellenbecker says the bill will be sponsored again in next year’s legislative session.


And, he said, he will continue working on his Web site, monitoring the industry, finding ways to either change the way it operates or kill it entirely.


He doesn’t mind the work, which he figures is 100 hours a week beyond his 40-hours-per-week job. And that work is spurred on not only by his daughter’s memory but by some of the "agonizing and painful" phone conversations he has had with other parents whose children have been killed or have died in an accident while on a magazine sales crew, Ellenbecker says.


"If you talk to these people like I’ve talked to these people … and seen the things I’ve seen … you’d want to stop them, too," he says.


Related stories:


Subscription for disaster, Part I:


www.portlandtribune.com/news/story.php?story_id=115501199061804400


Subscription for disaster, Part II:


www.portlandtribune.com/news/story.php?story_id=115525463085268000


Industry complaints aren't new:


www.portlandtribune.com/news/story.php?story_id=115525687461688100


toddmurphy@portlandtribune.com


 


Thank you for reading this....it needs to get out!


 


7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Awwwwwww Lisa thanks for spreading the word about this, Hugs Lisa

Anonymous said...

This kind of news  does want spreading around so everyone knows whats happening..You are doing a fine job Lisa letting people know through your Journal God Bless You Take Care.I hope you have pain free day today. Kath
astoriasand http://journals.aol.co.uk/astoriasand/MYSIMPLERHYMES

Anonymous said...

so sad

Anonymous said...

I've had those kids come to my door in the past, matter of fact one came this summer.  They are always nice kids trying to make some money .  Very sad story.  rose

Anonymous said...

i am so sorry this man lost his daughter.....i had never heard of this before you wrote about it last week but i will keep my eyes open now.
love,lisa

Anonymous said...

What a horrible nightmare for that poor man.  I am so surprised I've never heard anything about this until you brought it up the other day.  This should be brought to the attention of everyone and put to an end.  I will be coming back and reading the links when I have more time.
Lisa
http://journals.aol.com/wwfbison/life-on-a-bison-farm

Anonymous said...

I had heard quite a bit about these conditions among these travelling magazines sales crews.  But this article tells a lot more.  Thanks for calling our attention to it.  I also read in the paper an account of that bad accident, around when it happened.  So this follow-up is illuminating.  I hate to see teens get exploited.  It could even cause their deaths.  Besides getting them deep innto drug use etc..  Gerry