Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

High-risk attraction­s quandary for county

Ideas outpace ability to devise regulation­s

- By RICHARD N. VELOTTA, NICOLE RAZ and WADE TYLER MILLWARD

Las Vegas has long been a magnet for high-risk thrill-seekers, and the valley’s list of adrenaline-producing attraction­s gets wilder and wilder every year.

Visitors can fire a machine gun, throw an ax or drive a high-performanc­e car in excess of 100 mph. Yet despite dangers, little oversight of these experience­s exists.

Clark County officials are at a loss. They say they see a need for regulation of some of the safety aspects of thrill attraction­s such as SpeedVegas, where two people died in an accident last month.

But elected officials may be reluctant to draft specific regulation­s, County Commission Chairman Steve Sisolak said.

Sisolak said the county does not have the expertise or resources to regulate and monitor attraction­s like SpeedVegas and its Southern Nevada rivals, Exotics Racing and Dream Racing, which have operations at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. In addition, there are not many examples nationwide of oversight for what Sisolak calls

“extreme” attraction­s.

“Right now at the county, we have plenty of people who can tell you if you built a parking garage up to standard, or a hotel and that the fire sprinklers are good,” he said. “But we don’t have anybody who specialize­s in racetracks and that kind of stuff. We just don’t. I don’t even know if those people even exist.”

Clark County Commission­er Larry Brown, who also sits on the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority board of directors, said that after the Feb. 12 accident at SpeedVegas, commission­ers began conversati­ons about regulating and permitting extreme entertainm­ent-type attraction­s.

“Similar-type activities pose a potential risk,” Brown said. “That’s what we have to look at from the permitting side of it. Do we need to do a better job on the front end? You can never guarantee 100 percent safety, but (we’re) looking at ways to enhance safety.”

Meanwhile, the list of extreme attraction­s drawing tourists and Clark County residents keeps expanding.

“I don’t know where they come up with these ideas. They’re becoming more and more edgy,” Sisolak said.

WORST THAT COULD HAPPEN

Years ago, commission­ers had discussion­s about how to regulate traveling carnival ride attraction­s. They revived conversati­ons about keeping tourists and locals safe after the accident at SpeedVegas that killed Craig Sherwood, a 37-year-old real estate agent from Thornhill, Ontario, and his instructor, Gil Ben-Kely, 59. Ben-Kely had worked at the facility since it opened in 2016 and was in the passenger seat of the Lamborghin­i Aventador that hit a wall and burst into flames.

“I was led to believe that the worst that could happen is that you could go too fast and spin out on the grass,” Sisolak said in an interview in his office. “Obviously, it was much, much worse than that.”

The county doesn’t have staffers trained to look at racetracks and their design, spokesman Dan Kulin said. It also lacks a dedicated staff to annually inspect roller coasters and other attraction­s at local resorts.

When it comes time for the inspection­s, private firms labeled as experts by the county conduct the review. These inspectors submit reports to the county, which the county uses to decide whether the ride can continue running, Kulin said.

Finding a body of experts or a contractor to come and inspect a niche thrill business like SpeedVegas would require time and cost that Sisolak said he’s not sure is justified, given the rarity of these businesses and the small pool of available experts.

Likewise, sending county employees out to similar businesses that may exist elsewhere or in other countries would incur a large cost, he said.

While preventive regulation­s seem like a reach, Sisolak said he and fellow commission­ers may consider stronger accident-preparedne­ss measures, like requiremen­ts for onsite emergency medical response teams.

A big concern of commission­ers is that while they want attraction­s to be safe, they don’t want to overregula­te and make it impossible for companies to comply, putting them out of business.

WHERE TO BEGIN

Similar concerns about safety have come from track operators. Representa­tives of SpeedVegas and Exotics Racing say they want some form of regulation, but different companies have different ideas about what’s safe.

For example, some of the experts who reviewed SpeedVegas’ track at the request of the Las Vegas Review-Journal found the track unsafe for a variety of reasons. Meanwhile, other experts who reviewed the track for SpeedVegas after the accident deemed it safe.

SpeedVegas CEO Aaron Fessler and Romain Thievin, a co-founder of Exotics Racing, previously told the Review-Journal that they would be interested in helping the county or the state formulate regulation­s. Thievin said he helped to formulate such regulation­s in France.

Sisolak said he is hesitant to take too much of a cue from owners of local driving experience­s to avoid competitiv­e sparring that has occurred in other settings.

“When we tried to develop regulation­s for inflatable devices, you couldn’t get people on the same page,” he said. “One company would say, ‘Oh, you’ve just got it out for me because you’re a bigger carnival operator and you just want to squash me … and you have more wherewitha­l to effectuate these regulation­s, and it’s your best interest that makes it onerous on me.’”

Sisolak said he “definitely” wants the local industry involved but he would prefer to have recommenda­tions from some type of sanctionin­g associatio­n or a model of other rules to work from.

 ?? ERIK VERDUZCO/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @ERIK_VERDUZCO ?? A Feb. 23 crash at SpeedVegas that killed two people put local government’s ability to regulate edgy attraction­s in the spotlight. Clark County officials say they lack the wherewitha­l to determine what safety standards should be applied to such...
ERIK VERDUZCO/LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL @ERIK_VERDUZCO A Feb. 23 crash at SpeedVegas that killed two people put local government’s ability to regulate edgy attraction­s in the spotlight. Clark County officials say they lack the wherewitha­l to determine what safety standards should be applied to such...

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