Boy falls off Pennsylvania roller coaster

July 2024 · 6 minute read

Story highlights

Idlewild and SoakZone in Pennsylvania is latest park to have an accident

Thursday's accident marks the fourth in amusement parks this week

CNN  — 

The nation saw its fourth amusement park accident in five days when a three-year-old boy apparently fell out of a roller coaster in Pennsylvania on Thursday, a local official told CNN.

Details were sketchy about the child and the injuries he received at Idlewild and SoakZone in Ligonier around 1 p.m.

He was airlifted to Children’s Hospital in Pittsburgh about 50 miles away, said Westmoreland County public safety spokeswoman Mary Beth Eslary. A hospital spokeswoman said the parents have asked that no information be released about the child or his condition.

In the other recent accidents on amusement park or fair rides across the country, one child has been killed, another suffered a brain injury and at least two others were hospitalized.

Idlewild and SoakZone spokesman Jeff Croushore provided few details regarding the accident, but said it happened on the Rollo Coaster, an old-style wooden ride, CNN-affiliate WTAE reported.

The boy fell off about midway through the ride, according to Eslary.

Croushore said the boy, who was riding with his brother, was alert and talking after the fall.

The roller coaster, which was built in 1938, does not include seat belts and has a height requirement of 36 inches; riders under 48 inches must be accompanied by an adult, according to the park’s website.

The coaster was inspected August 6 and passed, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, which oversees the state’s 10,200 amusement rides. The department is now investigating the accident, and it will re-examine the inspection history, said Logan D. Hall, spokesman for the department.

The Rollo Coaster will be closed pending the results of the investigation, Croushore said.

A pair of inspectors from the Bureau of Ride and Measurement Standards, part of the agriculture department, arrived at the park at 7 a.m. Friday, according to bureau director Walter Remmert.

Recent accidents spark investigations

The Pennsylvania accident comes after several others across the nation.

A 10-year-old boy died on a water slide at the Schlitterbahn Water Park in Kansas City, Kansas, on Sunday. Two riders were injured when a launch cable detached at Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio, that same day.

Three children fell from a Ferris wheel at a Tennessee county fair on Monday, critically injuring two of them. On Thursday, a 6-year-old girl remained in critical condition with a brain injury and a 16-year-old girl had been upgraded to stable condition.

The Ferris wheel at the Greene County Fair and other rides at the fair were closed after the accident. WHJL

The ages and conditions of the victims in the Ohio accident were not immediately released.

The Kansas City accident, which killed the son of a state legislator, remains under investigation with few details released.

Authorities in Greene County, Tennessee, cited a mechanical flaw for causing the Ferris wheel gondola to tip and spill the girls out at the county fair.

The Kansas water slide passed inspection two months ago, according to state records. Park guests said the slide’s harness wasn’t working properly the day Caleb Thomas Schwab died.

Ten-year-old Caleb Thomas Schwab died from a neck injury while riding the world's tallest water slide at Schlitterbahn Kansas City Water Park in August. The slide's raft drops 168 feet, 7 inches before it hits another 50-foot drop. Some park guests said the slide's harness wasn't working properly that day. The circumstances of the boy's death are still under investigation. David Strickland/AP James A. Young II, a 45-year-old special-education teacher, lost his cell phone and wallet when riding a roller coaster at Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio, in 2015. When Young jumped over a fence into the restricted area under the roller coaster to look for his belongings, he was hit and killed by a coaster train. WJW In 2013, Rosy Esparza was thrown out of her seat on the Texas Giant roller coaster at Six Flags Over Texas and died from multiple injuries. Her family filed a civil wrongful-death lawsuit accusing Six Flags of negligence. The ride was closed for nearly two months and reopened in September 2013 with improved safety measures. Ronald Martinez/Getty Images A soldier who lost both legs serving in Iraq fell to his death from a roller coaster in upstate New York in 2011. Sgt. James Hackemer, 29, was riding the Ride of Steel roller coaster at Darien Lake Theme Park Resort when he plummeted about 200 feet to the ground. Hackemer's remains were laid to rest at Arlington National Cemetery. Susan Walsh/AP A teen was decapitated by the Batman roller coaster at Six Flags Over Georgia in 2008. He was struck by a train after he scaled two fences around the ride to retrieve his lost hat. Allen Sullivan/The Atlanta Constitution/AP Kaitlyn Lasitter lost both feet when a free-fall thrill ride malfunctioned at the Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom Amusement Park in Louisville in 2007. A cord wrapped around the then-13-year-old's feet and severed them at the ankles on the Superman Tower of Power. Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call/Getty Images A group of high-schoolers' pre-graduation outing turned into a nightmare when a water slide collapsed at Waterworld California in 1997. The accident injured at least 30 people and killed a teenage girl. The girl's family settled a lawsuit against Waterworld USA and its parent company Premier Parks Inc. for $1.7 million three years later, according to the Los Angeles Times. BEN MARGOT/APPrev Next

There are an average 4,423 injuries in amusement parks each year and 20 injuries daily from May through September, the parks’ busiest time, according to data from a study by the Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio.

About 30,000 of the cases involved those under age 18.

Data showed that even mall rides could be dangerous.

“Many of the injuries on these rides are over hard floors, and children are falling on a hard floor and are ending up with head injuries,” said Tracy Mehan, lead researcher on the study.

The 2013 study used Consumer Product Safety Commission information on children and teens who were taken to emergency rooms for amusement ride injuries over 20 years.

The injuries ranged from head and neck problems to injuries to the face, arms and legs. Soft-tissue injuries – damage to ligaments, muscles and tendons – were the most common.

Injuries considered serious made up a small percentage.

What steps can parents take to keep children safe

The study authors noted that parents can help keep children safe by following a few guidelines:

• Make sure to follow any special seating order and/or loading instructions.

• Always use safety equipment such as seat belts and safety bars.

• Make sure children keep hands and feet inside the ride at all times.

• Know your child. If you don’t think he/she will be able to follow the rules, keep him/her off the ride.

• Trust your instincts. If you are worried about the safety of the ride, choose a different activity.

• Avoid “mall rides” if they are over a hard surface or if they don’t have a child restraint such as a seat belt.

CNN’s Alison Main, Dominique Dodley, Val Wadas-Willingham and Catherine E. Shoichet contributed to this report.

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