So Dreamworld has re-opened and of course the area where the rapids are located is closed off, as you would expect.
http://www.news.com.au/national/que...y/news-story/35c1afc24fc6fcf44aaf87a56f2825f0
I am not sure how I feel about this part:
"Dreamworld is still in the planning stages of a permanent memorial to honour the victims".
Having a permanent reminder of the tragedy in the park will resonate differently from person to person. I hope whatever the final idea is doesn't come across as a tacky business ploy and is a well received gesture
So the operations director has now been charged with involuntary manslaughter:-When the ride was delayed, netting was applied along the slide's route:
On the hill after the slide's initial drop, the boat flew off the slide itself and into the netting above. The netting is helded up by arched brackets attached to the slide. Not the nicest way to go .
The most ridiculous thing is that the boat flying off the slide happened during testing of the ride, and this was the reason the netting was installed along with some padding on the bottom of the slide to slow it down. Why the impact of hitting the netting at such a speed wasn't thought about is beyond me though.
Edit: After doing a bit more reading, there seems to be more of a suggestion that the seatbelt (velcro type) came loose and the kid came out of the boat rather than the boat itself flying up. Either way, it's still something that really should have been considered.
The full indictment can be read here, and it makes for chilling reading.
Schlitterbahn are strongly denying the charges, although clear facts point towards the ride simply not being safe. I suppose many of the true facts will come out in the trial.
Surprised that the Daily Mail aren't sending a helicopter to circle round the park for the next 3 years...
H&S is invariable more and more self certification, which is the case here, they self certified the ride as safe when it wasn't.
You don't want to get me started on some of the horrors I've seen over the years, and it'll just get worse, fortunately European parks tend to have more integrity, but they could do the same if they wanted.
French fairground carousel hurls man to his death and injures 12 others as it crashes to the ground
A man has died after a fairground ride in central France collapsed, sending cars hurtling into the ground.
- Accident happened on a ride consisting of 14 cars attached to a central carousel
- Dead father, 40, who was at the fair with his two children, had been on the ride
- Four children are among those being treated for injuries at Neuville-sur-Saone
The accident happened on an attraction consisting of 14 cars attached to a central rotating carousel, Laurent Buffard, deputy mayor of Neuville-sur-Saone near Lyon, said.
The collapse resulted in the pods hurtling to the ground and the occupants being thrown out.
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The accident happened on an attraction consisting of 14 cars attached to a central rotating carousel, Laurent Buffard, deputy mayor of Neuville-sur-Saone near Lyon, said
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The collapse resulted in the pods hurtling to the ground and the occupants being thrown out. Pictured: The scene after the tragedy
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Four children are among those being treated for injuries. An eight-year-old boy is among them
The dead father, 40, who was at the fair with his two children, had been on the ride when it collapsed.
Buffard said: 'The carousel fell suddenly and hit the ground hard.'
He added that the tragedy was caused by a technical fault.
Four children are among those being treated for injuries.
An eight-year-old boy is among them.
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The dead father, 40, who was at the fair with his two children, had been on the ride when it collapsed
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Psychologists have been sent to the scene to help treat any victims who might be suffering from shock
The ride was composed of three rotating axis with baskets carrying people in pairs and Buffard told BFM television that one of the axis somehow hit the ground.
Meanwhile psychologists have been sent to the scene to help treat any victims who might be suffering from shock.
An investigation has been launched and the fairground shut down.
Wow, when I first read the BBC link I was thinking "Why's the park the only one being charged? What about the people that made the ride?" and turns out not only is it a DIY job but nobody designing it has any sort of engineering or related training!!The full indictment can be read here, and it makes for chilling reading.
Schlitterbahn are strongly denying the charges, although clear facts point towards the ride simply not being safe. I suppose many of the true facts will come out in the trial.