Past Articles

Foundation takes an advocacy role

12:23 AM PST on Thursday, February 17, 2005
By LYLE SPENCER / The Press-Enterprise

To family members and friends, Canyon Lake‘s Brett Downey was the beaming, perpetual-motion, two-thumbs-up kid.

Carefree and outgoing, he was planning a future on the motocross circuit and then as a firefighter.
So much to do, such a burning desire to do it.

In the late morning of Aug. 19, 2004 , Brett’s life ended at Glen Helen Raceway in Devore during a practice run amid the roar of engines that had captivated him for seven of his 11 years.

Getting on his feet after falling off his 80 cc motorcycle, he was run over by a larger, heavier 450 cc machine and killed almost instantly, according to police reports.

“He was the best little kid, so upbeat and positive — and really talented,” said fellow rider Matt Tedder, 18, at Perris Raceway, where he used to practice alongside Brett. “His accident shouldn’t have happened. It was a mixture of a lot of things, but it wasn’t Brett’s fault. He didn’t do anything wrong.”

Brett’s parents, Jim and Kathy Downey, have spent the past six months searching for meaning in the aftermath of the tragedy.

They have found solace in the Brett Downey Safety Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving motocross track conditions and heightening safety awareness through a series of innovative measures.

“People ask my wife and I how we can stay in the sport after what happened,” Jim Downey said, seated in the Murrieta den of former motocross rider Kenny Morris Jr. “It’s because my son taught us so much about life through the sport, and I feel we have to give back any way we can.

“One of the reasons we’re starting the foundation is that I don’t want another family going through this.”

Downey is president of the foundation, and Morris is its vice president. They plan to make it a motocross touchstone, approving and endorsing tracks while establishing and enforcing new safety standards.

The campaign is being launched in southwestern Riverside County — “the Mecca of motocross,” Morris said — on Sunday at Starwest Raceway in Perris with races, raffles and autograph sessions featuring such motocross stars as Murrieta’s Ivan Tedesco. Proceeds go to the foundation, which has raised $39,000.

Downey calls it “our first test for some of the things we want to do.”

Central to the task is staffing tracks with trained flaggers. Flaggers are the people who stand in the middle of the action, unfurling flags to signal and warn riders. Yellow means caution, but the degree of caution is left to the promoter’s discretion, which often causes confusion.

There were no flaggers at Glen Helen when Brett Downey was killed, and visibility was poor due to dusty conditions, according to his father.

At Sunday’s event, the foundation plans to provide flaggers with headsets for instant communication with track officials, as well as standard orange safety vests and whistles.

The foundation’s goals include certifying flaggers, making emergency medical technicians mandatory at practices as well as races, and enhancing visibility by using water tracks to keep down dust.

“The foundation is going to have a big impact on our sport, forcing some necessary changes,” said Freddie Edwards, whose wife, Donna, operates Perris Raceway, the oldest motocross track in California .

“The Downeys have quietly done a lot of great things. Knowing Brett the way I did, I think this is what he’d have wanted.”

Jim Downey is concerned about the sport’s future.

“If we don’t start fixing it, the government could come in … and we could lose the sport,” he said. “Kenny and I have a passion for this.”

Morris, 30, had been a motocross rider for 16 years when he shattered his fifth vertebrae in a spill during a 1998 Glen Helen race. He now uses a wheelchair to get around.

“Not a day goes by that I don’t do something related to motocross,” said Morris, who takes the foundation’s reins on days when Downey can’t find his emotional bearings.

Downey and Morris praised Corona-based motocross companies and other sponsors for their generous support.

Wristbands and T-shirts are being made for sale on the foundation’s Web site, www.mxsafety38.org . Brett’s jersey number, 38 — memorialized on a large rock at Perris Raceway — and the “Let God Steer” message from his necklace form images on the T-shirt.

Brett’s familiar two-thumbs-up gesture is the foundation logo.

The Downeys have two daughters, Brittany, 17, and Brooke, 14. Jim described the family as “devout Christians,” fighting back tears as he related a story.

“His mom got a feeling. She heard Brett say, ‘Mom, help those other kids so what happened to me doesn’t happen to them.’ ”

Remembering Brett Downey

By: Mike Paluzzi

Brett touched so many lives in the short time he was with us.

When I try to think about him I imagine Jim. Brett had so many of the same good qualities that you find in Jim & Kathy. Brett just like Jim always had a smile on his face. Barb and I thought we were going to the Downey‘s house to comfort them in these last couple of Days but when leaving we realized that it was Jim & Kathy who comforted us. This is the kind of people they are and type of loving person Brett was.

The Downey‘s are one of the most admired and respected families in our sport. I am having a hard time grasping why this would happen to this perfect family. But we cannot dwell on this thought. We have to think about the life they gave to Brett.

Brett had a great life. He has seen and done more things in his eleven years than most kids will have ever done in a lifetime. Brett took with him many memories of good times and left us with many memories of the happiness he felt.

The sport of motocross is unlike any other sport a child could be involved in and Brett loved motocross; he chose to do nothing else. He enjoyed the traveling across country and meeting new friends just as much as the racing.

The motocross community is a strong group of families and judging by everyone here today we are all part of the Downey family.

I cannot express how we are all hurting right now. But I have to let Jim, Kathy , Brittany & Brooke know that they gave Brett everything he could of ever wanted.

He was loved as a son and brother. His personality reflected this.

Though you are gone Brett, I speak for many of us here today, that losing you will help us to look at our lives differently and value the importance of everyday we live.

I’ll miss watching you ride your unicycle and watching you hang out with Nick and Daniel. I’ll miss the times with Jim scrambling to get bikes ready for racing (usually mine). Like the time this year in Mammoth where we made Brett an ignition using files and grinders.

Brett I know your listening right now and I have comfort in knowing that as I approach the starting gate with my boys I know that you will be riding along with them in every race.

Please be strong for the Downeys and know that they will need our support today and many months and years to come. God Bless.

A Flag At Half Staff

By: Scott Parkinson
An American flag set at half staff billows in a gentle breeze against the background of a beautiful blue summer Southern California sky. Stickers on the windows of trucks and T-shirts bearing the number 38 are seen in every direction one looks. As you drive through the track gates the first thing one sees is an ECC RM 85 resting on the top of a podium stand. Hung from a foot peg is a wreath, and below are pictures of a smiling Brett Downey. People that knew him best never fail to mention Brett’s contagious smile and deep passion for the sport of motocross.

On Thursday, August 19, 2004 , Brett Downey passed away while practicing at Glen Helen Raceway. Brett fell and was hit by another rider, whose vision was impaired by a cloud of dust: Brett was killed on impact.

Brett was a nationally ranked, up and coming amateur mini racer. His loss will be felt and shared throughout the United States in the motocross community.

Donna and Freddie Edward, owners of Perris Raceway, dedicated the August 28th round of their Hot Summer Nights Series to the memory of Brett. In honor of Brett and in support of the entire Downey family, the motocross community pulled together, as a family does, for a parade lap around the Perris race track. Michael Hall, one of Brett’s best friends, led the lap. Michael wore his fallen friend’s jersey. It was impossible not to get the feeling that, as Brett’s father Jim Downey puts it, “Brett’s spirit was riding on the shoulders of his friend.”

Michael stated that, “It is an honor to ride Brett’s bike around the track for the final time. There are no words to describe the depth of this honor.”

Donna Edward shared a few heartfelt thoughts and memories of Brett and just how much he would be missed.

As tears welled up in people’s eyes, Michael was given the checkered flag and took Brett’s bike for that last and final lap. He was followed by a small group of riders, including Sean Hamblin.

After the parade lap, Scott Parkinson from PanicRev.org said a prayer, which captured the emotions of many.

“Dear God, I am so upset about this death. I wish it had never happened. I wish Brett hadn’t fallen. I wish the other rider had seen him. I wish Brett were with us today. It hurts God; some of us are confused, some are angry, some are numb.

God it is my understanding that Brett had asked your son, Jesus Christ, to be his Lord and Savior. God if that’s true, then I know your Word promises that Brett is in heaven with you right now. Somehow, that takes the sting of death away, God. I thank you that we may rest in the comfort of knowing where Brett is.

Lord, I also thank you for allowing us to celebrate life through this wonderful sport of motocross. We are a community; we are a family, bound by a common love for dirt. God, I ask that you would comfort the Downey family in the way only you can. You know their pain, you know exactly what they are feeling and you know what they need. God also watch over the rider who crashed into Brett; may he turn to you in his time of need, pain, hurt and even regret. In 2 Cor, you say you are a God of comfort, comfort us now, O God.

In the name of Jesus Christ, Amen ”

It was impossible not to hear the tears in his heart as he prayed for understanding, the Downey family and this motocross community—family.

In life, Brett had a magnetic personality; in death, Brett has drawn this community together and formed a family. A family that, Michael Hall believes, “should remember Brett as a person with a deep love and passion for motocross that came across through his constant smile.” Brett has truly crossed the finish line and entered those eternal golden gates.