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"His feet hit the mat, and almost instantly his knees buckled down, and he just let out the worst scream that you could ever have heard from a child." That is Kaitlin "Kati" Hill, a mother who watched her three-year-old son, Colton, suffer a broken femur at a trampoline park. Her warning, shared more than 240,000 times on social media, resonates with every parent who has ever stood in a trauma bay at Texas Children’s Hospital or Memorial Hermann, watching their child struggle with an injury that never should have happened. In Cleveland, Texas, families visit trampoline parks in the surrounding North Houston and Humble corridors for birthday parties, school celebrations, and weekend fun. You drive down Highway 59 or take the 105 expecting the facility to be a safe environment for your children to burn off energy. You assume that because the park is open to the public, someone—the government, a regulator, or at least the corporate office—has ensured the courts are safe. The truth is much darker. Trampoline parks in Texas operate in a near-total regulatory vacuum. While the state regulates the "Class B" inflatable attractions like bungee trampolines or indoor coasters under Texas Occupations Code Chapter 2151,…