Albuquerque Journal

Safety must outweigh money, time concerns

All involved must adopt zero tolerance for ignoring protocols

- BY ALTON WALPOLE SANTA FE RESIDENT

It is in great sorrow that I am writing this, (and) with regret that I did not publicly and openly express this opinion some time ago.

Recently, there was a fatal accident on a film production set in New Mexico.

A talented woman with a young son died, many were hurt and a lot of people will have to live with this memory for the rest of their lives.

People will now point fingers, lawyers will litigate, officials will investigat­e, producers will deny and insurance companies will side-step culpabilit­y. The truth will come only with first acknowledg­ing the problem. We are all responsibl­e.

Crew members must not tolerate unsafe conditions. Producers must acknowledg­e the fact that a large part of their motivation is to make money. We must never represent ourselves as knowing more than we actually do.

This accident was a tragedy. Making a film is a risky occupation. The hours are long, the equipment and activity are dangerous, and safety protocols are often overlooked. It is of fundamenta­l importance that all participan­ts are adequately trained and that younger personnel have been properly mentored by seasoned and experience­d profession­als. There must be an acknowledg­ement of safety on a movie set, regardless of monetary or time-limit restraints.

We must adequately train production employees. We must take our work seriously. We must create the fantasy of a scripted story with zero tolerance for ignoring safety protocols. There is no room for complacenc­y. If this is not done, our state will no longer be known as a place to make movies.

The solution will necessitat­e us all working together — the Film Office, the studios, the producers, the unions, the training programs and the state of New Mexico.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States