Fair ready for blackouts
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Jennifer Kho
FAIRGROUNDS -- Clocks might stop, lights may go out and computers
might crash.
But Costa Mesa residents can be rest assured that even if the power
fails this summer, the carnival rides at the Orange County Fair won’t.
“I’m worried about my refrigerator, because the food will go to waste,
and about my computer, because I won’t be able to do any work on it,”
Costa Mesa resident Tony Henriquez said Friday. “I wasn’t actually
concerned about the rides, but it’s cool they aren’t going to be wasting
our electricity.”
The carnival at the fair has always been run on eight or nine large
generators, not on the power grid, according to a safety information the
fair released this week.
Becky Bailey-Findley, general manager and chief executive of the
fairgrounds, said that people not in the know also could be concerned
that the carnival -- with a “very festive high-energy appearance that is
very reliant on power, with motion, color, lights and sound” -- might be
taking much-prized electricity away from other residents.
“The generators will keep the rides, concession stands and everything
else running, so in terms of the potential for energy interruption during
the fair, the carnival is probably the safest place to be,”
Bailey-Findley said. “The carnival people joke that they hope there is a
power interruption because there will be nothing left for people to go to
except for the carnival.”
Traditionally, the carnival has used generators because the
fairgrounds didn’t have electricity in the carnival fields, she added.
The Arlington Theater also is run by generators and, although the rest
of the fair operates mainly on regular electricity, it is prepared for
potential blackouts with emergency lights, generators and generated light
towers, Bailey-Findley said.
“We are planning and hoping that our fair guests will have just as
much fun as they normally do if the power is interrupted,” she said.
“We’re trying to keep it fun, festive and safe. We think it’s better for
people to stay on the grounds than to leave, if the power goes out.”
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