Dayton Daily News

Bounce house regulation­s found lacking

Ohio charges $255 annually for permit and inspection.

- By Jen Fifield Stateline.org

It was a brisk fall day in Nashua, N.H. — tailor-made for apple-picking and scarecrow-making at the Halloween festival at Sullivan Farm.

When a hayride dropped Danielle Rogers and her family near a colorful bounce house, her 3-year-old son, Joseph, and the 2-yearold son of a family friend climbed inside. Then came a gust of wind and, as Rogers screamed, the inflatable house lifted off the ground. She grabbed the rope attached to the corner, but the wind yanked it from her hands. The bounce house, and the boys, went sailing high into the October sky, like a giant balloon — severely injuring the two boys.

Inflatable attraction­s like bounce houses, obstacle courses and slides, which have increased in popularity in recent decades, may seem less ominous than roller coasters that flip riders upside down or carnival rides that send thrill-seekers whirling through the open air. But they can be just as dangerous and they are far less regulated.

The estimated number of injuries on the attraction­s soared from 5,311 in 2003 to 17,377 in 2013, according to a Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) report analyzing U.S. hospital records. A Stateline analysis found that the trend continues, with an estimated 20,700 injuries last year.

Only half of states — including New Hampshire — have regulation­s governing permits, inspection­s and insurance. But even where rules are in place, a Stateline investigat­ion found major shortcomin­gs.

In several states that require all inflatable­s to be permitted, dozens of companies advertise inflatable rentals online, but do not have permits on file with the state. That means the state has no way of knowing if they have been properly inspected or are insured.

Few states scout for events where inflatable­s will be set up, or search online for company listings. When they find illegal operators, states rarely issue fines or fees. And in a few states, the regulating agencies don’t have the authority to punish operators, even if they wanted to.

In addition, state laws about amusement rides are often unclear, leaving operators unsure about whether inflatable­s are regulated and what the penalties are for those who don’t follow the rules.

In many of the states that regulate inflatable­s, officials say that they try the best they can. But some admit it’s hard to manage.

“It’s difficult sometimes because (operators) come and go quickly,” said Denise Oxley, general counsel of the Department of Labor in Arkansas. “Unless they set up at a local fair or event, or they open a little play place for kids, it’s hard to catch.”

Even if the laws were better enforced, though, it wouldn’t solve the safety issues that plague the industry, according to interviews with state officials, inspectors, insurance agents and operators.

Most injuries occur, they say, because operators are careless during setup, children aren’t supervised, and guidelines for safe play aren’t followed. But state laws focus on insurance and annual inspection­s — not on training for operators or rules on supervisio­n.

Bounce house accident

In New Hampshire, a state investigat­ion found that the Nashua bounce house wasn’t staked down when the boys climbed in it that day in 2014. What happened next, when the wind came up, is detailed in a legal complaint filed by one of the boys’ parents. The house sailed over a fence, higher than a nearby barn. It was about 50 feet in the air when, with the boys still inside, it flipped over and shot to the ground “like a lawn dart,” the complaint said.

Gary Bergeron, the owner of Rickety Ranch, an animal sanctuary on Sullivan Farm, had bought the bounce house just days before from a man living down the road, according to Nashua Police Department records. It cost him $1,500 and was at least 12 years old.

Bergeron, at the time a licensed amusement ride inspector for the state, told police he inspected the bounce house and found several problems, including missing stakes. So he said he moved it to a fenced-off part of the farm, and put two haystacks in front of it to block it off. He blew it up to let it dry, he said, not because he intended it to be used.

But witnesses, including farm visitors and volunteers, later told police that the bounce house wasn’t behind a fence, and wasn’t blocked off. And, police found, the bounce house had been advertised as a feature of the event: An ad on a local website invited the whole family to “jump in the jumpy house.”

Detail from an incident report filed by an investigat­or for the New Hampshire State Fire Marshal’s Office.

Bergeron, who organized the festival as a fundraiser for Rickety Ranch, declined to comment. He denies any fault or wrongdoing, according to civil court records. He was also criminally charged in June 2015 with failing to register the inflatable and not having it properly inspected. Bergeron pleaded no contest.

Like New Hampshire, about half the states that regulate inflatable­s require them to be registered and inspected before being used at a public event. Other states regulate inflatable­s no matter where they are set up, including when they are rented out to private birthday parties and company events.

No matter the laws, some business owners find ways around them. They cross state lines for a weekend fair without getting a permit, or change their business name or phone number to avoid detection, according to state officials.

In states that attempt to regulate all inflatable­s, it can be hard for regulators to keep up. An online search in some of those states found dozens of operators without permits: 24 in Arkansas, 30 in New Mexico, 36 in Tennessee, and 90 in Texas.

In New Hampshire, Briggs Lockwood, chief of tramway and amusement ride safety, says there are likely to be businesses the state doesn’t know about, but he “would have no idea really how big the problem is.”

In fact, to assess the problem, many states have relied on help from competitor­s — inflatable operators dropping a dime on those operating without permits.

This can lead to a cat-andmouse game. Operators wait until the state inspector leaves before setting up, then another operator calls the inspector and tells him to come back, said Rob Gavel, the program manager for Maryland’s safety inspection unit.

Tennessee has a reporting system on its website that allows people to report a company operating an amusement ride without a permit. The site also lists at least 18 inflatable companies that are currently advertisin­g their services online but do not have permits. Stateline found 22 more.

‘Participat­ory’ attraction­s

In Nashua, Rogers and the other parents rushed to recover their children from the mangled mound of vinyl on the ground.

Rogers’ son, Joseph Suomala, had several broken bones. Aayden Vogel, the younger boy, was far worse off. He was unconsciou­s and not breathing with signs of a traumatic brain injury, according to the complaint.

Joseph went to a local hospital by ambulance, Aayden to a trauma center by helicopter.

Both boys survived, but since 2000, at least four people died in U.S. accidents related to inflatable­s, according to Patty Davis, a CPSC spokeswoma­n. In the same time period, at least 18 people have died on other types of amusement rides and attraction­s.

“Participat­ory” attraction­s — such as inflatable­s, go-karts and trampoline parks, in which people have greater control over their own movement — have significan­tly higher injury rates than other amusement attraction­s, said Kathy Fackler, president of the nonprofit Saferparks, which tracks amusement ride injuries and advocates for tougher safety standards.

“Some of that you can mitigate as a parent or participan­t,” Fackler said. “But maybe not all of it.”

The number of injuries on inflatable­s started to soar after 2008, according to the CPSC and an analysis of its data by the Child Injury Prevention Alliance.

The trend can be explained in part by the 2008-09 recession, said Larry Cossio, who owns a national insurance agency that specialize­s in inflatable­s. As people lost their jobs, they looked for an easy way to make money, he said. Inflatable­s can be purchased online for as little as $1,000.

All those people entering the industry without training or experience made injuries much more likely, Cossio said.

Flyaway accidents like the one in New Hampshire remain rare. But they often receive a lot of attention and give the industry a black eye, said Kevin Baldree, owner of Austin Moonwalks, a permitted inflatable­s business in Texas.

Other types of accidents are much more common, such as when children play rough and injure themselves or fall off the devices onto a hard surface, according to a Stateline review of injuries reported to states and of the CPSC’s injury database. The most common injuries include sprained ankles, broken arms and legs, concussion­s and strained or sprained necks.

$11K fee for Ohio vendor

Many inflatable operators, such as Steve Rothenberg, owner of an amusement company in Maryland called Talk of the Town, say they support reasonable state regulation­s. Without them, “it would be a freefor-all,” Rothenberg said.

But operators and insurance agents say the laws as they are currently enforced don’t keep children from being injured.

Instead, operators say, they create an uneven playing field by increasing costs for operators who follow the rules. States often charge permit or inspection fees, ranging from $10 to $280 a year. And insurance can cost another $1,500 or more a year for each attraction, Cossio said.

State officials say small businesses sometimes choose to shut down once they find out about those costs. For larger businesses, which are more likely to follow the rules, the costs add up.

Ohio charges $255 each year for a permit and inspection. UltraSound Special Events, an entertainm­ent company in the state, has about 40 inflatable­s, and pays about $11,000 just to stay in compliance, said Kevin Weiging, the company’s owner.

These costs ultimately fall to the customer, who may choose another company to save a few dollars, Weiging said, “so you’re not only paying the fees, you’re also losing the business.”

Instead, operators say states should focus on training. In Pennsylvan­ia, operators can inspect their own attraction­s after they pass a test and get a permit. Many of them choose to do so — the state has about 1,300 certified inspectors. After that, they need 16 hours of continuing education every three years.

The state audits the inspection­s every once in a while, and doesn’t see many problems, said Walt Remmert, director of the state’s bureau of ride and measuremen­t standards.

“If that’s their business, that’s their livelihood,” he said. “They have every reason to comply.”

Seeking legal action

In 2015, Bergeron was found guilty of not registerin­g the bounce house and not having it properly inspected. New Hampshire fined him $2,480, with half of the payment suspended for a year of good behavior.

Aayden had to stay in the hospital for a month, relearning how to walk and talk, according to his parents’ court complaint. His severe brain injury left him with physical and mental disabiliti­es, the complaint also said, and his eyesight is likely to be permanentl­y damaged.

Aayden’s parents, Kattrina Morales and Robert Vogel, along with Rogers and Joseph’s father, Bryan Suomala, are suing the farm and the sanctuary, as well as Bergeron, his wife and stepson, and Katherine Williams, an owner of the farm. The boys’ parents and their lawyers declined to comment.

 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE NASHUA POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? A deflated bounce house sits where it fell after soaring into the sky with two children inside at a Halloween festival in New Hampshire in 2014. Across the country, state regulation­s on inflatable­s are lacking, while injuries are increasing.
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE NASHUA POLICE DEPARTMENT A deflated bounce house sits where it fell after soaring into the sky with two children inside at a Halloween festival in New Hampshire in 2014. Across the country, state regulation­s on inflatable­s are lacking, while injuries are increasing.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Police and onlookers observe the scene after two boys were injured when a bounce house they were playing in lifted off the ground.
Police and onlookers observe the scene after two boys were injured when a bounce house they were playing in lifted off the ground.

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