Could horse-drawn carriages make a comeback in Las Vegas?
| By Joe Schoenmann, Las Vegas Sun | |
| McClatchy-Tribune Information Services |
In
Well,
To those who have lived through
"I would urge the city council to ... make it humane or there (will be) issues," said
"It's weird that it comes at a time when
Yet carriage rides are nothing new to
Approval came in late 2007 after a council flip-flop: First it allowed the rides, but only if carriages had seat belts and the horses had been acclimated to traffic noise. Later, those requirements were dropped. The argument against seat belts was that insurance companies didn't like them as they made the rides more dangerous -- if a horse got spooked, the passengers wouldn't be able to quickly jump out -- Smith said at the time.
Smith looks back on it as a good business that will do very well in redeveloping downtown.
"It will work -- and it will work big-time," he said.
He got out of the business after Humpherys died in 2012. It was tough to give up the business, given that he put in so much time gaining city approval. In the early 2000s, Smith said, council members were skittish because of a horse-carriage accident years earlier.
In
Smith said the ban prevented him from operating rides between Bridger and Stewart avenues, and from 7th to Main streets.
The new proposed route allows rides within that area but takes away the major thoroughfares of
The city also has a raft of rules to follow, even though passenger seat belts and a measure of a horse's ability to keep its cool in a noisy, angry city milieu no longer exist.
One provision of the code says no animal "may be subjected to any condition or treatment which will impair the good health or physical condition of the animal."
To some people, simply having a horse tromp around on asphalt all day is poor treatment.
"I would never work a horse on the asphalt for eight, nine hours a day," Pringle said. "Their feet ... are not meant to work on asphalt."
If
"People these days pick up the phone and call, or they can document (what they see) with a date-stamped photo," Pringle said. "And people are much more aware of animal welfare."
A possible vote on the routes is scheduled for
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(c)2014 the Las Vegas Sun (Las Vegas, Nev.)
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| Wordcount: | 745 |



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