OSHA Criticizes Job Safety at Theme Parks, Entertainment Venues

A top federal job safety regulator said he was putting theme parks and entertainment venues “on notice” after a series of worker injuries and deaths, including at Walt Disney World and SeaWorld Orlando.

In a conference call with reporters, David Michaels, assistant secretary for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, said “safety is often not considered the highest priority” in the entertainment industry, the Orlando Sentinel reports.

Michaels singled out three deaths last summer at Disney World and another in February at SeaWorld, where a trainer was drowned by a killer whale. All four fatalities prompted OSHA investigations. One of the deaths resulted in Disney being fined $35,200 in the death of a monorail driver, whose train collided with another. The company was cleared of wrongdoing for a stunt performer who broke his neck during rehearsal. A probe into the SeaWorld fatality is ongoing.

Representatives from the theme parks objected to Michaels’ accusations, according to the Sentinel. A Disney World spokeswoman said “safety is our single most important responsibility” and that the company has a team whose sole task is to evaluate and enhance job safety. A SeaWorld spokesman called the trainer’s death an unprecedented and “terrible tragedy,” adding that the park is “very proud of our workplace-safety record.”

Michaels said the penalties OSHA can impose are relatively small and may not be enough to influence businesses. He called on Congress to raise the limits on the size of the fines.

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