Midway Moments: Veteran inspector gets O.C. Fair ready for a safe ride
If Al Scanlan does his job right, nobody at the Orange County Fair will notice.
Thatâs not to say his duties arenât important. They are â crucially so.
It is to say that if Scanlan and his colleagues dot every âiâ and cross every âtâ and no one gets hurt and thereâs no other major incident, itâs a job well-done.
Scanlan is a field inspector with Coulter Associates LLC, a Bloomingdale, Ind.-based company that provides safety oversight for carnival rides everywhere.
On Thursday morning, about 24 hours before Fridayâs start of the 127th annual O.C. Fair in Costa Mesa, Scanlan was wrapping up final inspections for the 70-some rides at Orange Countyâs biggest event. Much of the work had been done in the days before, but he noted that some rides needed more work and he would remain on hand after opening day to handle anything that comes up.
With more than four decades of experience, Scanlan, 64, is quite the veteran of his trade. Born the son of a Montana newspaperman, Scanlan started in the carnival business while in high school in Arizona. Heâs basically never left it.
âIâd like to say Iâve learned at least something during that time,â he said with a smile.
The job has taken him around the world and keeps him on the road often. Though Scanlan lives in Santa Maria, heâs out 10 months of the year. Before coming to the O.C. Fair, he was at the San Diego County Fair and did a stint for the Electric Daisy Carnival in Las Vegas.
Much of his career has been with Coulter, but for several years he was maintenance director at Neverland Ranch, singer Michael Jacksonâs Santa Barbara County retreat noted for its rides and zoo.
Scanlan knows Jacksonâs personal legacy is mixed. But his experience with the late pop icon wasnât, he says.
âHe was probably one of the most genuine people Iâve ever met,â Scanlan said.
Looking over a ride is a busy affair. The ones at the O.C. Fair are owned and operated by RCS, short for Ray Cammack Shows.
A lot of people look at RCSâ equipment â Scanlan, state inspectors and RCS staff. Each ride has a foreman who does daily inspections.
Printed in large font on the back of RCS employeesâ T-shirts is the message âBe safe!â
On Thursday, Scanlan stood on the Twister, a sleek spinning ride, going through the types of things heâs on the lookout for.
There are the obvious: nuts and bolts in their proper places; no protruding sharp objects or frayed electrical wiring; safety harnesses that work.
Then there are the less obvious: Are the safety signs visible â the ones that say to keep hands and arms in the moving vehicle at all times? Is the gate surrounding the ride sturdy? Is the line area ready to handle an influx of people?
What Scanlan doesnât do much of, at least not anymore, is ride the rides.
âMost of the thrill rides give me a headache,â he lamented.
Apparently, the carnival industry doesnât use human guinea pigs to ride attractions over and over to test them. With machinery and sensors that can detect g-forces, itâs much more scientific and precise, Scanlan said.
Speaking of rides, Scanlan said that if thereâs one thing heâd like to tell fair visitors â other than that the attractions are safe â itâs this: Donât make children ride something they donât want to.
Forcing squirming kids to go on a spinner or roller coaster isnât a grand idea, he says.
And donât forget to read those safety signs.
Editorâs note: Midway Moments is a recurring column chronicling the Orange County Fair.
IF YOU GO
What: 127th annual Orange County Fair
Where: OC Fair & Event Center, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
When: Friday through Aug. 13
Hours: Noon to midnight Wednesdays through Fridays; 11 a.m. to midnight Saturdays and Sundays
Cost: General admission: $12 Wednesdays through Fridays and $14 Saturdays and Sundays. Senior citizens 60 and older and children ages 6 to 12: $7 daily. Parking: $10 for cars, $20 for buses and limousines. Admission and parking are free from noon to 3 p.m. opening day.
Information: ocfair.com/oc-fair
Twitter: @BradleyZint
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