Ski industry officials are stressing their safety record after a chair fell from a lift at Attitash Mountain Resort over the weekend.

One man was hospitalized and later released after his chair on Attitashโ€™s Flying Bear Lift fell 20 feet to the ground on Sunday afternoon. No other injuries were reported.

The New Hampshire State Fire Marshalโ€™s office is investigating what caused the accident. State officials noted Monday that the lift involved in the incident at Attitash had last been inspected in November. NHPR has requested a copy of that inspection report, but the state says it could take several days to release that information.

The incident has prompted questions about how well safeguards are being followed at Attitash and other New Hampshire ski resorts. Attitash and Vail Resorts, its parent company, have not responded to specific questions from NHPR about whether there had been any similar accidents with Attitashโ€™s lifts in recent seasons or about their lift staffing levels, given an active job posting seeking an โ€œexperienced lift mechanicโ€ at Attitash.

Jessyca Keeler, president of the industry group Ski New Hampshire, stressed that the incident at Attitash is an outlier and said โ€œpeople should feel confident and safe riding our chairlifts.โ€

โ€œNew Hampshire ski areas take skier safety very seriously,โ€ Keeler said in an email to NHPR. โ€œWithin the list of elements inspected are structural, electrical, and mechanical components. Ski areas also perform regular maintenance on their lifts, as well as any additional maintenance recommended by lift manufacturers.โ€

Ski lifts are regulated by the New Hampshire Passenger Tramway Safety Board. Mark Petrozzi, who has been sitting on the board for roughly 20 years, said the tram in question had been inspected before the accident, and it wouldnโ€™t have been running if it had not passed that review.

โ€œThere’s no lifts in the state that can operate unless they’ve successfully completed and been issued their license to operate for that season, that winter season,โ€ said Petrozzi, who also works in risk assessment for ski areas. โ€œThis lift in fact went through that process, and it was licensed, and it was approved for the passengers, the public.โ€

A state inspector recently briefed the safety board on potential issues with tramway models in use at Attitash and several other New Hampshire resorts, based on incidents that happened elsewhere, according to meeting minutes posted online. Attitash and Vail Resorts did not respond to questions from NHPR about the steps they took in response to that information. State officials said the lift involved in Sundayโ€™s incident was not one of the models discussed during that meeting.

Petrozzi said what happened this weekend is rare. While he said there were no reports of the tram or ski chair having potential malfunctions prior to the incident, they are working with the manufacturer of the ski tram to figure out what went wrong.

โ€œBottom line is, no, there was, there was no indicator prior to this that was something that was discovered obviously or could have been discovered to the best of our knowledge,โ€ Petrozzi said.

State rules require passenger trams to be inspected at least once a year, and sometimes more often. The state has two full-time inspectors and one who works part-time, according to Petrozzi.

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