A windy day that caused havoc at a youth soccer tournament when gusts took three “bounce houses” up into the air, sending bodies tumbling, has highlighted the safety hazards and spotty regulation of the inflatable amusement attractions.
A mother was critically hurt at the soccer tournament Saturday on New York’s Long Island when one of the inflatables crash-landed on her. Twelve others at the event, in the Nassau County community of Oceanside, also were taken to hospitals for injuries.
The Associated Press reported that parents, coaches and bystanders ran frantically toward the inflatables, some using knives to deflate the equipment and prevent further injuries.
“I never thought there would be any serious issues, any concerns with safety,” said one father at the event, Mike Perniches. “But now, I’m like, forget it.”
In the last two months, at least 10 inflatables nationwide have been toppled by wind or collapsed under too much weight, injuring more than 40 people, mostly children, according to www.rideaccidents.com.
In April, two slides collapsed at separate events in California, injuring nine children, the AP reported. In February, two accidents in Arizona injured four children, including sisters who were inside a bounce house when wind gusts tossed it onto a roof.
There also have been fatalities. A Pennsylvania man died last June, days after being hurt when an inflatable slide collapsed and pinned him at a Cleveland Indians game. A 5-year-old boy was killed in March, 2010, when he fell off an inflatable and landed on a concrete floor at an indoor entertainment center in Wichita, Kan.
“I wish this was a rarity, but it’s not. It happens all the time,” said Jim Barber, a spokesman for the National Association of Amusement Ride Safety Officials, based in Brandon, Fla. “These are probably the most dangerous amusement devices they have.”
Barber said too many companies that rent inflatables will drop them off at a party with little instruction. He said the devices won’t fly away if they’re properly installed.
“If they’re going to rent these things, they should be rented with an operator,” he said. “A lot of times they never get anchored down, they put too many kids in, they put two- and three-year-old kids in with a 16-year-old.”
Although most states have laws and inspectors overseeing mechanical rides at amusement parks and fairs, only a handful give inflatables the same scrutiny. Barber called for tighter state regulation.
A Consumer Product Safety Commission report released six years ago found that the number of inflatable-related injuries climbed from 1,300 in 1997 to 4,900 in 2004.
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Most of these accidents are avoidable if bounce house operators and parents properly secure the device with anchors. While the anchors do not prevent all wind related accidents, it does allow an attentive parent or guardian the opportunity to deflate the bounce house if weather conditions deteriorate.