News

State officials stress safety as Mountain State Fair prepares to open

State officials stress safety as Mountain State Fair prepares to open

As of 11 a.m. Thursday, nine inspectors have logged more than 160 hours reviewing 35 rides at the Mountain State Fair. Photo: Saga Communications/Dee Pridgen


FLETCHER, N.C. (828newsNOW) — North Carolina officials highlighted safety measures Thursday ahead of the N.C. Mountain State Fair, stressing ride inspections, law enforcement coordination and public health precautions as thousands prepare to attend the 10-day event.

Labor Commissioner Luke Farley joined Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler and other state and local leaders at a news conference at the WNC Agricultural Center in Fletcher, where the fair opens Friday.

Troxler said safety remains the fair’s top priority each year, noting that preparations stretch year-round and rely on cooperation among agencies and visitors alike. “We want everybody to come out and enjoy,” Troxler said. “But most of all, we want everybody to be safe and go home in the same shape that they came in.”

Farley, whose agency oversees ride inspections, said his department deployed nine inspectors ahead of the fair and has logged more than 160 hours reviewing 35 rides. Two inspectors will remain on site daily throughout the event.

“Our state has the strictest ride inspection program in the country,” Farley said. “I’d put my own children on any of these rides.”

The safety briefing also underscored lessons learned since Tropical Storm Helene struck Western North Carolina a year ago, when the agricultural center served as a shelter and staging ground for response efforts. Farley called the fair’s return “a testament to the resilience of Western North Carolina.”

Other speakers included State Bureau of Investigation Director Roger E. “Chip” Hawley, Buncombe County Sheriff Quentin Miller, Forest Service officials and representatives from Skyland Fire and Rescue. Together, they emphasized traffic management, law enforcement coordination and emergency medical readiness.

Department of Agriculture officials said animal exhibits will follow strict protocols under Aedin’s Law, including mandatory hand-washing stations and veterinary checks.

“This is truly a team effort,” said Glen Coley of the N.C. Forest Service. “From the roadways to the gates to the fairgrounds, every agency is working to make sure this is a safe and family-friendly event.”

The Mountain State Fair runs Sept. 5-14 at the WNC Agricultural Center, featuring rides, agricultural exhibits, crafts, music and food.

Recent Headlines

8 hours ago in Entertainment

What to Stream: Ed Sheeran, ‘Only Murders in the Building,’ Charlie Sheen doc and Borderlands 4

"Only Murders in the Building" returning for its fifth season and Ed Sheeran coming back with the new pop album "Play" are some of the new television, films, music and games headed to a device near you.

8 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Ella Langley, Megan Moroney, Lainey Wilson lead Country Music Association Awards noms with 6 each

Joining Lainey Wilson in competing for the night's highest honor — CMA entertainer of the year — will be Luke Combs, Cody Johnson, Chris Stapleton and Morgan Wallen, last year's winner in the category.

16 hours ago in Entertainment

‘SNL’ wins big for season 50 at the Creative Arts Emmys. Obama, Kimmel and Lamar also take trophies

Barack Obama won his third career Emmy and Kendrick Lamar won his second, while the 50th season of "Saturday Night Live" was the biggest winner with 11 on the second night of the Creative Arts Emmy Awards.

16 hours ago in Sports, Trending

Ravens’ stunning collapse: Baltimore blows 15-point lead in final 4 minutes in 41-40 loss to Bills

With Matt Prater hitting a 32-yard field goal as time expired, Baltimore squandered a 15-point lead in the final four minutes in a stunning season-opening 41-40 loss to the Buffalo Bills on Sunday night.

3 days ago in Entertainment, Music

This year’s song of the summer is a ballad, not a banger. Here’s what that says about us

For the past 14 weeks and counting, the top Billboard spot has been held by a love ballad: Alex Warren's "Ordinary." As Berklee College of Music professor and forensic musicologist Joe Bennett notes, the February release is "a fair bit slower than the mean average for the Hot 100, or for a historical song of the summer."