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MONTE CARLO: No citations in fire at resort

County officials rule blaze accidental

The Clark County Fire Department has decided to issue no citations in connection with the Jan. 25 three-alarm fire at the Monte Carlo, which led to the evacuation of 6,000 people and cost almost $100 million in damage and lost business.

"We reviewed all the information, and we didn't feel it was intentional," Fire Chief Steve Smith said Tuesday of the mistakes that led to the fire. The department's legal counsel, from the civil division of the district attorney's office, concurred in the decision not to cite, Smith added.


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  • The department identified the cause as stray bits of molten metal, called slag, produced as workers used a cutting torch on the roof of the Monte Carlo.

    Smith had said in a Jan. 31 news release that workers at the Monte Carlo had failed to use protective "slag mats" as they cut corrugated steel to build a rooftop walkway. In the end, investigators got conflicting stories from workers about the use of mats, the chief said Tuesday.

    In January the fire chief had said workers also had failed to post a "fire watch" worker to detect chance ignitions resulting from slag dropping on burnable materials, including the roof's rubber membrane and the building's foam upper facade.

    On Tuesday he said an investigation revealed there was an "ineffective" fire watch, at best.

    As to the lack of a so-called hot work permit from the county, Smith said, the workers lacked a valid county permit but had thought an in-house permit system at the Monte Carlo sufficed.

    Union Erectors was the company whose workers were cutting steel at the Monte Carlo on the day of the fire. Afterward, the contractor claimed its workers had followed safety procedures.

    Smith downplayed the benefit of citing any party in connection with the fire, which was costly but caused no major injuries.

    "The penalty, or consequences, are minor," he said, explaining that a citation for breaking the fire code is only a misdemeanor.

    Rather, Smith said, he wants the message from the blaze to be the "importance of getting a hot work permit." He believes planners of the walkway project could have prevented the fire by getting the required county permit.

    Doing so would have allowed officials to review the job and site plans, and remind personnel of proper safeguards, including how to run a worthwhile fire watch.

    When asked whether the decision to forgo citations means that Union Erectors or the Monte Carlo or its parent company, MGM-Mirage, will face less liability should they be defendants in a civil suit related to the fire, Smith said, "I can't speculate on any theory." Citations are a criminal finding.

    The existence of a citation also might affect the future costs of insurance for the resort, according to Terry Taylor, an independent fire investigator in Northern Nevada.

    Commenting on the fire safety industry in general, not on specifics of the Monte Carlo fire, Taylor said some jurisdictions place more emphasis on education than enforcement.

    But Taylor believes vigorous enforcement is a useful tool for gaining compliance with safety codes.

    If a property owner is usually compliant but suffers a fire, Taylor said, "They've soiled their trousers in public, so to speak. So do I come in with a stick and beat them on the head? ... Or do I say, 'They're in so much trouble with their insurance company, their investors, do I cut them some slack?' "

    In another development involving safety questions that touch tourism on the Strip, the Paris Las Vegas has closed six high-roller suites after county inspectors found steam saunas installed in bathrooms without permits or inspections for plumbing and electrical work.

    Inspectors wrote up violation notices for the saunas, on the 33rd floor of Paris on Tuesday and Friday.

    Inspectors had fanned out Friday to check past remodeling at the Paris and a number of other Strip hotels also owned by Harrah's Entertainment.

    The inspectors visited sites on a list of suspect remodeling projects, which Harrah's voluntarily developed by comparing past budgets for capital improvements with permits it had on file. Some of the projects took place under the prior owners of hotels Harrah's now owns.

    Marybel Batjer, a Harrah's executive, said Tuesday that she just received the violation notices but would research how recently the Paris' high-roller suites were remodeled.

    Contact reporter Joan Whitely at jwhitely@reviewjournal.com or (702) 383-0268.

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    Whistle-blower wrote on March 27, 2008 05:38 AM: A message to Safety Director.
    You are exactly right.

    There hasn't been ANY OSHA regulation in this town for at least 20 years.

    There is no term for what's going on in Las Vegas.
    If the don't cite you on the first instance, guess what? Some one dies before you see them again. Then,and only then, you might see OSHA get involved.
    That would be the Second Instance Citation.

    You can call it what ever you like.

    You, being a Safety Director, are about 8th in line when it comes to "Gift Giving" by the Contractor, So I understand your ignorance.

    Calling OSHA is supposed to be the last line of defense when you see a Contractor violating Safety..

    Calling the Contractors Safety Director is the quickest way to become unemployed. Keep it up my ignorant Director. More dead bodies.


    wayneaaron wrote on March 26, 2008 09:16 PM: Who did they pay off?


    joe wrote on March 26, 2008 04:01 PM: Citations are only handed out if people get killed and then only important people, not some worthless rent-a-cop, construction worker or hillbilly tourist. Those are expendable. I really hate the greed and corruption that runs this town.


    keith wrote on March 26, 2008 03:58 PM: Basically jason is saying, and I agree with , that the powerfull, the wealthy, the influential and those deemed neccisary to thier cause are exempt form ANY form of prosicution.


    Jason wrote on March 26, 2008 03:44 PM: thas not suiprising there are no charges filed in this case, the wealthy those in positions of power are always exempt from criminal charges, unless thier christian conservative republican, then the book is thrown at them.


    Tom, Burbank wrote on March 26, 2008 11:20 AM: NO citations? This is incredible. I guess Dr. Desai owns stock in MGM-Mirage.


    Citizen wrote on March 26, 2008 10:32 AM: This state and Las Vegas in particular has always been run by folks on the take, using juice or insider influence peddling.When the Mob ran the joints you just knew who to play pattycake with if you wanted to get things done. Now when Multinational Corps own these Casinos its more smiley face. But just as crooked and laced with influence peddling and ofcourse $$$$$. Except now the guys running things have better breath, not so much garlic, more listerine if you know my meaning!


    Ha Ha wrote on March 26, 2008 10:23 AM: Hey Las Vegas Rubes! Wew Casion operators own this town and frankly, uhmm tee hee, the State House and the Govenor! So listen up schmuckos, live with it, Ok? We pay plenty to keep the wheels of justice greased in our favor. You dont think its called Sin City for nothing do you? So go back to your cracker boxed overpriced homes and shut the fxxxk up!


    prissy wrote on March 26, 2008 10:19 AM: no citation thats just injustice i almost got ran off the freeway and did the right thing and waited for highway patrol / cops and stook around for a 300 citaton and that was livid


    Lee Yarbrough wrote on March 26, 2008 08:35 AM: Pretty amazing how many construction safety experts hang out on the RJ message boards here giving the world their great wisdom.

    I am sure none of them ever made mistakes and let the Slurpy machine run over onto the floor.


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