'Make canal safe after my sister fell in and died'
FamilyThe family of a woman who died after falling into a canal are calling for safety barriers to be installed around the water, to prevent further tragedies.
Mum-of-five Jody Brown, 38, was pulled from the canal basin off Wolverhampton Street in Walsall in the early hours of 3 May.
Her brother Paul Clarke, 42, who is calling for barriers, said he had seen children falling in a section which "looks like grass on top of the water". There have been previous warnings that weed on the water can be mistaken for grass or asphalt.
The BBC has approached the Canal and River Trust (C&RT), which looks after the waterways, and Walsall Council for comment.
Clarke's petition calling for barriers or safety fencing has attracted about 200 signatures.
Clarke, from Walsall, described his sister as "bubbly and outgoing".
He told the BBC her death had left the family "absolutely heartbroken" and they wanted to raise awareness of the danger surrounding a square section of the canal in the town centre.
"The canal is quite dangerous... I live right by it myself," he said. "There's no safety barriers at all. There's just a little bit where the bar is, but it's still all open.
"We just want better safety measures."

Clarke said there were many pubs and restaurants surrounding the waterfront and he had previously seen other people falling in the water.
"I've seen children falling in," he added.
"And there's big cars that actually drive on to this big square bit where it looks like grass on top of the water. There's been other deaths in the past there as well."
West Midlands Police confirmed an unnamed woman was pulled from the canal on 3 May and the death was not being treated as suspicious.
"Our thoughts remain with her loved ones at this terrible time," the force previously said in a statement.
Paul ClarkeMultiple people, including a man and his son, have fallen into the water in the past.
In 2019, the Canal and River Trust said volunteers cleared 60 tonnes of weed and safety signs were put up following safety calls.
A buoy was installed in 2021 in an attempt to warn people of the danger.
But a woman who was visiting from London the following year raised the alarm over the weed. She said she "just stepped in" while walking to a nearby restaurant and was left traumatised.
"The canal is a vital part of our community, and making it safer should be a top priority," Clarke wrote.
The 42-year-old said his sister Jody had been in the area at a hotel at the time, and there was CCTV of her walking along the canal's edge before she fell.
Canal and River Trust"She's accidentally walking off, gone off block, fell in," Clarke explained.
"She left the hotel... she left there and then she walked in.
"I don't think she could swim."
He told the BBC his sister was a "lovely" person who had loved a "laugh and a joke".
"She was bubbly, very outgoing, had a lot of friends," he said.
"I'd like to see some safety barriers put in place to stop it from happening to other families, having to get through the heartache."
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