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Heavenly agrees to settle zipline death case


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By Andy Furillo, Sacramento Bee

After a honeymoon hike at Heavenly Mountain Resort, Mark and Rebecca Dickson were riding the chairlift down the hill, laughing and talking about their lunch plans, when the newlyweds saw a blue rope flutter ahead of them in the stiff afternoon.

“And then I heard my husband say, ‘This is not good,’” Rebecca Dickson recalled in an interview Tuesday.

The rope had broken off from Lake Tahoe’s Heavenly Flyer ZipRider line that ran parallel to the lift about 100 yards away. The fluttering rope wrapped around the couple’s chair, which swung back and forth so violently in the entanglement that Mark Dickson, who was 51, fell out of his seat and to his death in the rocks about 40 feet below.

Rebecca Dickson and Mark Dickson’s two sons from a previous marriage sued, and in September they settled the wrongful death case in El Dorado County Superior Court.

A confidentiality agreement has kept the financial terms of the settlement under wraps. The plaintiffs had asked for $15 million in a settlement conference in June, according to documents they filed ahead of a court hearing.

But, while the payout has been kept secret, the settlement does allow the Dicksons’ attorneys to reveal a list of Heavenly’s acknowledgments about the facts surrounding the Aug. 31, 2009, accident.

Under terms of the deal, Heavenly’s owners agreed to make a number of safety-related changes, including ones that call for strengthened drug and alcohol testing of the people who run the Heavenly Flyer, regular equipment inspections and shutting down the ride in high winds.

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Comments (3)
  1. sailor1 says - Posted: December 4, 2013

    strengthening drug enforcement? in SLT? At a ski resort! You’ve got to be kidding! How presumptuous!

  2. Steve says - Posted: December 4, 2013

    Amazing that the resort did not have a working wind meter installed or test employees for drugs and alcohol immediately following a fatal accident involving equipment operation. Assuming this happened on US Forest Service property, under Forest Service permits and oversight, also amazing the Forest Service doesn’t require same.

  3. dan Wilvers says - Posted: December 5, 2013

    I remember that day, very, very windy. I’m so sorry for their loss, and happy to see any procedures to diminish future tragedies.

    With that said I feel for companies like Heavenly that seek to create recreational opportunities that allow us to enjoy the outdoors. I am thankful for their product, particularly the ability to ski there with those incredible views. I’m sure loss of life weighs on those good folks hearts just as it does ours.

    I hope the family that has suffered so much can live a little better knowing many here in Tahoe are sorry for their loss and hoping for better days for them.