Bounce House Accident Illuminates Perils

AP/The Huffington Post   By FRANK ELTMAN and JOHN SEEWER First Posted: 06/07/11 09:44 AM ET Updated: 08/07/11 06:12 AM ET

OCEANSIDE, N.Y. -- Bodies began tumbling when a two-story red, white and blue inflatable slide went soaring into the air at a youth soccer tournament over the weekend. Two other inflatables also flew off the ground that breezy afternoon, causing youngsters to suffer bumps and bruises but critically injuring a mother who had an inflatable crash-land on her (PHOTO BELOW).

Fathers, coaches and bystanders sprinted toward the airborne amusement rides, some using knives to furiously stab the air-filled edifices before anyone else was injured on Saturday. "I never thought there would be any serious issues, any concerns with safety," one father, Mike Perniches, later told The Associated Press. "But now, I'm like, forget it."

Thirteen ended up at the hospital that day. And people in Oceanside, on New York's Long Island, learned a lesson that is becoming all too familiar: Inflatable amusement rides - with their hit-and-miss regulation and a lack of industry-wide standards - can endanger lives when not properly installed or operated.

In a little more than a week beginning in late April, two slides collapsed at separate events in California, injuring nine children, according to media reports.

In Arizona, two accidents in the Tucson area injured four children, including sisters who were inside a bounce house in February when wind bursts tossed it onto a roof. In April, a boy and girl were in a bounce house that was blown across three lanes of traffic.

"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."

It's not the rides that are the problem, he said, it's the way they are set up and supervised.

Too many companies that rent inflatables will drop them off at a party with little instruction, said Barber. "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," said Barber, who oversaw New York State's ride inspectors before retiring.

"They don't fly away if they're properly installed," he said.

Police on Long Island did not immediately have the name of the vendor who provided the rides at the Oceanside United Soccer Club festival on Saturday. Nassau County District Attorney Kathleen Rice said her office would investigate the circumstances surrounding the accident.

A woman identified as Cathleen Hughes, 36, of Oceanside, suffered head and spinal injuries when the flying slide landed on top of her, according to Newsday. An update on her condition was not immediately available from South Nassau Communities Hospital in Oceanside, where she was being treated.

"She was walking on the track and it hit her," Perniches said. "She was lying still on the ground, there was blood coming out of her mouth."

Most injuries from inflatables involve bumps and bruises but, as in Oceanside, there are more severe hazards. Most accidents are caused by improper anchoring, high winds and lack of supervision, according to a risk management advisory which New Hartford, N.Y.-based Utica National Insurance issued to groups which use inflatables.

A Pennsylvania man died June 2010 just days after 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.

In January 2010, winds blew a bounce house at Florida birthday party into a pond with a 5-year-old girl inside. Neighbors pulled the child out of the water.

Regulating amusement rides is left up to each state. While most have laws and inspectors overseeing mechanical rides at amusement parks and fairs, only a handful give inflatables the same scrutiny.

Barber, the spokesman for the National Association of Amusement Ride Safety Officials, said states don't have enough inspectors or money to keep up with the thousands of bounce houses and inflatable slides in operation. Still, he thinks it would be a good idea for all states to regulate them.

The Archdiocese of Cincinnati banned inflatable rides at southwest Ohio church festivals in 2009 after a boy was injured when a gust of wind flipped over a slide at a softball tournament sponsored by another group. The wind tossed the slide about 70 yards, carrying the 11-year-old boy with it. He came away with just bruises.

A Consumer Product Safety Commission report released in 2005 linked the growing popularity of inflatables with an increasing number of injuries treated at hospital emergency rooms from 1997 to 2004.

The agency found there were an estimated 1,300 injuries in 1997 and 4,900 injuries in 2004.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission warns that operators should anchor inflatables to the manufacturer's requirements and that bigger rides such as slides should have a least two people operating them. It also says weight limits should be watched closely.

The escalating problems and lack of industry-wide standards led a group of inflatable operators to form a trade association in 2003 to promote safety and develop guidelines and training programs. The Responsible Operators of Amusement Rentals has about 50 members, most on the East Coast. That's a fraction of the companies operating today.

Michael Mazzocco, who was coaching his 6-year-old daughter's soccer game when the inflatables went airborne Saturday on Long Island, said it was difficult at first to believe what he was seeing.

"We were all sprinting toward it, trying to grab the big one and get the air out of it," he recalled. "There was kind of pandemonium at first with kids not knowing where their parents were and parents on the other side trying to find their children. There were a few tense moments."

He said his wife, who was shooting video of the soccer match, immediately turned the camera on the flying projectiles.

"We're just hoping that this is a lesson for others to make sure these things are anchored properly," he said. "I don't know if that was the case here, but it is always windy down there. It we can get someone to make sure this doesn't happen again, I will be happy."

___

Seewer reported from Toledo, Ohio. Associated Press researcher Rhonda Shafner in New York contributed to this report.

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OCEANSIDE, N.Y. -- Bodies began tumbling when a two-story red, white and blue inflatable slide went soaring into the air at a youth soccer tournament over the weekend. Two other inflatables also flew ...
OCEANSIDE, N.Y. -- Bodies began tumbling when a two-story red, white and blue inflatable slide went soaring into the air at a youth soccer tournament over the weekend. Two other inflatables also flew ...
 
 
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04:56 PM on 06/26/2011
Very scary.. Wind gives no warning. In a rain storm you can at least see the clouds forming and you can prepare for it and get all the kids out. Wind, you just see the effects after. In Albuquerque, we have had the windiest season in 12 years and we have had to cancel many events due to extreme winds. As far as Jumpers not being safe, I think it is all about how it is set up. We go overboard and if there are high winds in the forecast(25 MPH is our Limits) we will bring in some really thick and long stakes, along with 80 Lb sandbags and even 55 gallon water barrels to tie the inflatables to. Not only do we tie the straps on the bottom of the jumper to all this weight, we tie the jumper itself to the stakes and/or sandbags/barrels. A lot of extra work but kids safety is at stake here. Some companies let the customers set these up themselves and to the untrained, the weight of the kids seems like enough weight to keep the jumper on the ground!! I believe this is the cause of most accidents. http://www.amazingjumps.com
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crayola 08b
i'm just a little crayon in a big box.
04:26 PM on 06/10/2011
isn't that one of the signs of the apocalypse?
07:00 AM on 06/08/2011
That looks like fun to me.
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03:14 AM on 06/08/2011
I give you .... this years demonstration sport at X-Games.
10:32 PM on 06/07/2011
It's just stupid people, from our universities of course, who do not know how to put these up properly
09:49 PM on 06/07/2011
We bought a bounce house about 4 or 5 years ago and lots of birthday parties later - no injuries, no problems. We use the spikes that came with the thing and post a responsible adult to watch the kids. It doesn't seem that hard.
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09:29 PM on 06/07/2011
"rent them with an operator"??? I've got a better suggestion. I say rent them only after the renter passes an IQ test!!!!
07:52 PM on 06/07/2011
And, "You can't fix stupid!!"
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vietveter
Wish ididnt know now what ididnt know then
07:19 AM on 06/08/2011
NEVER !

fanned
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BrassOnes
Hasa Diga Eebowai
07:47 PM on 06/07/2011
If you're about to fall 50 feet through the air you want to be in a bounce house.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RedWhiteandBlueState
Let's all be purple.
07:14 PM on 06/08/2011
Depends on where you land, no? A couple of these kids crossed three lanes of traffic.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Parade Keegan
I Can Hear You
07:32 PM on 06/07/2011
Can't these "houses" be tethered?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
bolivare
IT'S SO FLUFFY!!
07:42 PM on 06/07/2011
They usually are, however, if not done right, a stiff wind can just grab it and pull those tethers right out of the ground. That is my suspicion on the cause of these accidents...improperly tethered.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Parade Keegan
I Can Hear You
08:11 PM on 06/07/2011
Thank you. I've heard of so many incidences with these "houses" in the past. Crazy.
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75thRanger
Though I Be The Lone Survivor
07:30 PM on 06/07/2011
"Bodies began tumbling when a two-story red, white and blue inflatable slide went soaring into the air at a youth soccer tournament "

This just goes to show you that you shouldn't allow your kids to play soccer.

RLTW
07:07 PM on 06/07/2011
Can't kids these days just let their older brothers bruise them, like when I was a kid?
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syrius
Excuse me, EXCUSE ME!
07:03 PM on 06/07/2011
the sky is fallin' the sky is fallin'...
Or
I'll get you my little pretty!!!
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75thRanger
Though I Be The Lone Survivor
07:30 PM on 06/07/2011
:)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MelO86
06:59 PM on 06/07/2011
Bounce houses aren't dangerous on their own. It's the stupidity of not making sure they are secure that causes accidents like this to occur.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Demarcus Jackson
Community College Psychology Prof in the South
06:56 PM on 06/07/2011
I've never liked those crazy bounce houses.
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zippythedude
On 07/20/2005, Canada legalized gay marriage
07:10 PM on 06/07/2011
Bounce houses in and of themselves are not crazy...it's what you DO in them that detrmines if they're crazy. And "crazy"? coming from a psycology instructor? tsk, tsk. At best, the bouncey houses have borderline personality disorder.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
bolivare
IT'S SO FLUFFY!!
07:35 PM on 06/07/2011
I thought they were fun myself. Just got to make sure they are really secure. And doing ..other...fun things in them becomes very interesting. :)