Stadium of Fire makes changes after fireworks injured 26 people last year


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Stadium of Fire organizers are implementing new safety measures after last year's fireworks incident.
  • A new vendor will handle fireworks and the drone show, and the Provo fire marshal is performing multiple inspections before the sold-out event.

PROVO – Organizers of this year's Stadium of Fire said they've taken steps to make sure a fireworks fiasco doesn't happen again.

More than two dozen people were hurt during last year's show when fireworks malfunctioned and went into the crowd during a military flyover. A report later identified the problem with a 36S Howling Tails to Hammer firework, which contained rows of tubes.

After an explosion, the report found some of those tubes discharged improperly, sending projectiles toward the audience and the stage.

"That one particular firework will not be allowed in the stadium again," said Jim Evans, executive director of America's Freedom Festival at Provo, which puts on Stadium of Fire. "Any rocket self-propelled firework is not allowed in the stadium. We've got rid of those, and that right there will make it a lot safer."

Jim Evans, executive director of America’s Freedom Festival at Provo, speaks with KSL-TV on Wednesday. Evans said a new vendor will perform the fireworks and drone show.
Jim Evans, executive director of America’s Freedom Festival at Provo, speaks with KSL-TV on Wednesday. Evans said a new vendor will perform the fireworks and drone show. (Photo: Greg Anderson, KSL-TV)

Evans also said a new vendor is involved this year that will produce both the fireworks and drone show on Friday night.

Provo Fire Marshal Lynn Schofield told KSL-TV his team had been on site multiple times this week inspecting fireworks and equipment, and they'll do the same thing the day of the show.

"Safety is obviously the No. 1 priority," Schofield said. "We want people to come to Provo. We want them to have a great time. We want them to see a good show. We want them to go home healthy and otherwise unharmed."

A banner advertising the 2025 Stadium of Fire hangs on LaVell Edwards Stadium in Provo on Wednesday. Organizers are taking steps to prevent another fireworks fiasco like last year's incident that injured 26 people.
A banner advertising the 2025 Stadium of Fire hangs on LaVell Edwards Stadium in Provo on Wednesday. Organizers are taking steps to prevent another fireworks fiasco like last year's incident that injured 26 people. (Photo: Greg Anderson, KSL-TV)

Schofield called last year's incident that injured 26 people "unfortunate," but he said organizers have learned from it.

"That was a device that, quite frankly, probably should have never been in the stadium, and it's been in the stadium 20 years," he said. "I would be a very poor fire marshal if we didn't learn from what happened last year, so … we don't allow anything that's self-propelled inside the stadium anymore."

Organizers said they're expecting a sold-out crowd of nearly 50,000 people to attend Stadium of Fire on Friday, which is featuring the country band Rascal Flatts.

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Daniel Woodruff, KSL-TVDaniel Woodruff
Daniel Woodruff is a reporter/anchor with deep experience covering Utah news. He is a native of Provo and a graduate of Brigham Young University. Daniel has also worked as a journalist in Indiana and Wisconsin.

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