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- A formal training program for ride operators and attendants encompassing all safety aspects of the park operations including: general health and safety knowledge, dealing with visitors who misbehave, dealing with defects and malfunctions, reporting procedures for accidents or incidents, emergency procedures, safe operation of specific attraction, safe loading and unloading of riders, details of passenger restrictions, use of passenger restraints, etc.
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Safety is our industry’s top priority and amusement rides in the U.S. are extremely safe. In a typical year, more than 385 million guests safely enjoyed in excess of 1.7 billion rides at approximately 400 North American fixed-site facilities.
- Regulations & Standards
In addition to a thorough set of internal mechanical,...
- Ride Operators
Amusement ride operators receive training through “hands-on”...
- Design & Technology
The amusement park industry's tradition of continual...
- Safety Tips
Safety is the Amusement Park Industry's No. 1 Priority....
- G-forces
Blackouts and other health issues associated with Gs require...
- Regulations & Standards
Safety Regulations for U.S. Amusement Rides. Amusement ride safety in the United States is regulated through a patchwork of voluntary standards and federal, state, and local laws.
- How Common Are Amusement Park Accidents?
- Are Theme Park Rides Safe?
- How Are Roller Coasters Tested For Safety?
- What Does It Mean When A Ride Is Temporarily Closed?
- What Happens If There's An Accident?
- How Do You Stay Safe on rides?
- More Like This
There were an estimated 130 serious ride-related injuries at North American theme parks in 2021, according to the National Safety Council's latest ride safety report for IAAPA. Those include fatalities as well as injuries requiring immediate hospitalization for more than 24 hours for reasons beyond observation. For perspective, 658 people died in b...
Overwhelmingly, yes. "Safety is at the forefront of everything we do," Wahl said. Even new cutting-edge thrill rides marketed as the fastest, longest or steepest have to follow safety standards set by industry experts. "The ASTM standards prescribe very detailed G-force levels that have to be achieved in order for a ride to be considered safe," Sea...
"We have very detailed, very prescriptive requirements for inspections," Seay said. He said each ride is tested every day of operation. On top of that, separate weekly and monthly inspections are done to check for various things, including wear and tear. "Those rides have hundreds if not thousands of electronic inputs and outputs that are showing t...
Wahl likened attractions to big machines with huge IT structures. "It's a very complicated system with many sensors to exactly ensure that our guests can enjoy safe fun." And just as with computers or smartphones, he said, "sometimes the system is needing an update or checking on what is going on or gets halted." "It might sound strange, but this i...
If a serious incident occurs, Seay said, parks will typically notify state authorities and the ride's manufacturers, who work together, often with third parties brought in by either regulators or park operators, to determine the cause. "Mechanical and electrical failures end up being probably the smallest component of what can create an incident," ...
"There are very distinct guidelines on what you need to do to have a safe experience, and if people are purposely not following those guidelines, that that puts not only the rider at risk, but it puts other riders at risk," Seay said. That begins even before boarding a ride. "I'm sure you've been on a ride where you go up and it says, 'If you have ...
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- Eve Chen
- Senior Consumer Travel Reporter
In addition to a thorough set of internal mechanical, electrical, design, and operational safety checks and standards, fixed-site amusement rides are subject to one or more layers of independent examination: state and local government, insurance companies, and private safety firms.
IAAPA promotes and advocates for the adoption of effective amusement ride safety legislation at the most appropriate level of government. Safety is our industry’s number one priority and the oversight provided by effective regulation is an important addition to steps taken by manufacturers and owner/operators to ensure that amusement rides ...
The Council of Amusement and Recreation Equipment Safety (CARES) was founded in the late 1990s as a voluntary organization of chief government officials in the United States and Canada responsible for the enforcement of amusement ride regulations within their jurisdictions.
Aug 31, 2022 · The chance of being seriously injured on a fixed-site ride at a U.S. amusement park is 1 in 15.5 million rides taken. But the survey is optional. Only 177 of 436 invited parks submitted ride safety data for the 2019 survey, the last report to include ridership levels from before the COVID-19 pandemic.