Los Angeles Times

Over-the-top July 4 derby nixed

- By Hannah Fry

The annual Fourth of July race began 19 years ago without planning or concern for safety: Three young friends decided to celebrate America’s birthday by hurling themselves down a steep San Clemente street in office chairs.

The unsanction­ed derby has grown in popularity over its nearly two-decade run — last year drawing 7,000 enthusiast­s from across the county to the residentia­l streets. But some neighbors are fed up with the shenanigan­s that come with the race. They complained to the city that the event has resulted in injuries and spectators have strewn trash across the neighborho­od and used their yards as public restrooms.

As a result, the city has in effect canceled the race, taking over Avenida Victoria and Avenida Rosa, two streets normally dedicated to the derby, for a more “family friendly” celebratio­n called Stars, Stripes & Slip ’N Slides.

“The event has at times become unsafe,” Samantha Wylie said of the derby during a City Council meeting last month.

She said firefighte­rs have not been able to respond to incidents near the derby without being hit by water balloons. Last year, a person was injured when hit with a frozen balloon.

Stars, Stripes & Slip ’N Slides will feature a 300-foot inflatable water slide, an obstacle course and a smaller slide for kids. There will be a water balloon contest, a pieeating contest, a hula hoop contest, music, food trucks and a beer garden. The event is free, but the city is charging for wristbands for certain activities.

“We’re still going to draw the crowd that wants to be there, but we’ll have the right safety dials in place that protects the city a little bit further as well as the homeowners and residents that live on that street,” Wylie said.

What started as a simple chair race transforme­d over years into a show of creativity and is the longest-running event of its kind in the world, organizers say.

Over the years, the derby has attracted go-karts, tricycles, surfboards on wheels and even inflatable horses attached to a piece of wood nailed to two skateboard­s rolling through the neighborho­od. In 2019, a group raced down the street relaxing on a leather love seat on wheels. As part of the tradition, spectators fling water balloons at the racers as they zip by.

“This sucks,” one person wrote on a city social media post advertisin­g the new event. Another complained that because people “ruined” the office chair races, “we now have to pay to be baby-sat by the city.”

City Manager Andy Hall said residents have told him that the event has grown so large that “it’s just a little more than that area can handle,” especially without restrooms and other amenities.

“There was one lady that said someone came into her home and demanded to use her restroom,” Hall said during a council meeting.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States