You’re Invited to the 2012 International Climbers’ Meet, hosted by the AAC

46071fe5.jpeg
Jeremy Lee climbs while Colin Smith belays. Alexandre Buisse

view email in browser | unsubscribe | update your profile | forward to a friend

American Alpine Club seeks climbers to join the 2012 International Climbers’ Meet

This message is to let you know about the 2012 International Climbers’ Meet, an event you won’t want to miss. The ICM will be held this October 8-13 in Yosemite Valley, and for $450, you’ll receive:

  • Transportation to and from the Fresno airport, and within Yosemite Valley
  • Six days and nights camping at beautiful and secluded Yellow Pines campground
  • Three catered meals per day
  • Five and a half days of climbing in spectacular Yosemite Valley
  • Nightly campfire for storytelling, socializing, and gerenal carousing
  • An opportunity to partner with other participants or experienced host climbers

Seriously. This has to be the most unique (not to mention affordable) climbing experience you could possibly have in Yosemite. While some climbing ability is necessary, participants of all abilities are welcome to apply; the goal is to host a diverse group of climbing abilities from a multitude of countries, like we did last year.

The application deadline is June 10. Download an AAC Member Application or an International Application, and send the completed forms to Carol at ckotchek@americanalpineclub.org. (You can also contact Carol with your questions.)

See you in Yosemite!

55.jpeg
George Lowe, Mary Ann Dornfeld, Carol Kotchek, and Luis Silva relax after a day of climbing at the 2011 ICM. Alexandre BuisseClick hereto see more photos from last year’s International Climbers’ Meet.Share this email:

TwitterDiggFacebookDeliciousRedditStumbleUponDZoneGoogleLinkedInMisterWongMySpaceNetvouzNewsVineSlashdotTechnoratiYahooMyWebBlinkListDesign FloatWebnews.de

Contact Us:

The American Alpine Club

710 10th St Suite 100

Golden, CO 80401

Add us to your address book

open.php?u=60afa02764806293a37aacfda&id=0fd1388313&e=561a5dbd50

Enhanced by Zemanta

Do you really want to sell helmets this way? Does this article promote the industry?

Or does this article just create liability issues?

I recently read an article in a trade magazine about selling cycling helmets. As usual, it caught my attention, but for different reasons. This article was directed at retailers as an educational tool on how to sell helmets. However, the article was at best misleading and would probably get the retailer in trouble in the future. Besides, it created a sales program focused on the negative side of cycling rather than the benefits.

Here are the quotes that I found amusing, actually laughable if they were not so wrong.

As a bike storeowner,thisrgivessyouvbothoanbincredibleropportunityr–uandya–powerfuloresponsibilityi–itotupsell yourlbikeucustomerssandeconvinceothemctotpurchaseuachelmet andmperhapspsavepa life.a life.

It’s your responsibility to inform your customers of the invaluable protection a helmet provides, the importance of wearing a safe helmet that fits well, as well as the dangers and statistics of cycling-related head injuries.

According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), 91% of bicyclists killed in 2009 weren’t wearing helmets. The IIHS has estimated that wearing a helmet can reduce head injuries by 85%.

In the United States the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) regulates helmet law.

…-keep a helmet in shambles from a crash on display and include a testimony about the life it saved…

[emphasize added]

Seriously? This was written let alone allowed into print?

However, it was the hocus pocus of a graph in the article that caught my eye.

Bicyclist deaths by helmet se, 1994-2009

No Helmet Use

Helmet Use

Total

Year

Num

%

Num

%

Num

1994

776

97

19

2

796

1995

783

95

34

4

828

And so on through 2009.

The title implies the deaths occurred because cyclists did not wear a helmet. If you take two unrelated numbers and compare them, you can accomplish anything. For proof of this do a web search for “moon landings,” “Kennedy assignation,” and “World trade center,” for an interesting journey through made-up  statistics to prove this point. Here they point out who died without a helmet compared to who died wearing a helmet and imply that everyone who died without a helmet died of a head injury.

Absolute fabrication of statistics to scare people!

Helmets prevent head injuries; helmets don’t save lives. If you are involved in an accident severe enough that a head injury will kill you, other parts of your body will be injured severely enough to kill you.

So let’s tackle these misstatements in the article.

As a bike storeowner, this gives you both an incredible opportunity – and a powerful responsibility – to upsell your bike customers and convince them to purchase a helmet and perhaps save a life.

As a retailer you have NO legal responsibility to your customers as far as educating them. You DO have a legal responsibility to educate them correctly if you do educate them. Whether or not you have a moral or ethical responsibility is something you must deal with and a risk you must accept. That risk evaluation also includes losing money by not selling accessories like helmets. However, it is shameful for this article to try to place a burden on a retailer for not selling a helmet.

Helmets do not save lives; helmets may prevent head injuries.

It’s your responsibility to inform your customers of the invaluable protection a helmet provides, the importance of wearing a safe helmet that fits well, as well as the dangers and statistics of cycling-related head injuries.

What is a “safe helmet?”

If you are going to use statistics to prove your point, then you better understand what you are saying. You cannot take two “stats” and compare them to prove a point when the numbers are derived from different sources or different factors. (A perfect example of this is the chart that went with the article).

According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS), 91% of bicyclists killed in 2009 weren’t wearing helmets. The IIHS has estimated that wearing a helmet can reduce head injuries by 85%.

Just because a large percentage of people died who were not wearing a helmet does not mean you can then say those people died of a head injury. That is like saying 97% of the people in the US who eat ice cream do not get cancer. Only three percent of the population gets cancer anyway.  However, that statistic is 100% correct and 100% meaningless, just like the statistics in the article. (However, you can use this statistic to eat more ice cream if you want.)

In the United States, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) regulates helmet law.

This is the second time I’ve seen this in the past couple of months. NO! The CPSC is tasked with eliminating dangerous products. If a helmet is not doing what you say it is supposed to do AND there is the possibility of injury, then the CPSC can become involved. There are no federal helmet laws. The CPSC is a federal agency. There are some state helmet laws and some federal regulations concerning helmets. Those regulations are all based on a product meeting the tests of either a testing organization (ASTM, ANSI, etc.) or private non-profit organizations that test helmets (Snell).

…-keep a helmet in shambles from a crash on display and include a testimony about the life it saved…

These numbers also lead one to believe the people died because the cyclist was wrong and not wearing a helmet. However, that is not true either. Cyclists die when vehicles hit them. If the speed of impact is greater than 30 to 40 mph, the cyclists have almost a zero chance of surviving the impact. (See Zone 30 and Pedestrian and Bicyclist Intersection Safety Indices.) Distracted drivers, drivers not paying attention, drivers who don’t care kill cyclist with or without a helmet. See Sharing the Road With Bicycles for more examples.

Do Something

Why is this important? Because consumers do trust and believe retailers as the article points out. If you provide consumers with information which they rely upon in making a purchase which is incorrect and results in an injury you are liable. The manufacturer is going to walk away from this lawsuit without paying a dime. This is a lawsuit the retailer alone must fight.

The retailer made a misstatement that the consumer relied upon to the consumer’s detriment.

This helmet will save your life. The cyclists die of a head injury, and the retailer is writing a check.

You have to educate the consumer; however, when you do that you need to know what is correct. You cannot give the consumer incorrect information. You need to tell the consumer helmets prevent head injuries. No one knows, and there is zero proof that helmets save lives. In fact, the opposite is true. Looking at injury and fatality reports, helmets do nothing to save lives.

What is bad about this article is the fact the article was written by a helmet manufacture and published by an industry magazine. The magazine failed its readers because it published an article without checking the facts in the article. The manufacture that wrote the article is selling helmets based on made-up  statistics and facts to promote fear.

Cheap journalism is bad journalism.

On top of that are we helping cycling? If you are trying to sell a helmet to someone based on fear, are we helping the sport? Or are we telling parents that cycling is too dangerous for their kid? Is that how you want to sell cycling; this is a dangerous sport, so spend another $100 with me?

Studies show that using fear or laws to scare people into using helmet’s results in less people cycling. See Cyclists Without Helmets Deserve to Die, Doctors Argue Against Mandatory Bike Helmet Laws or Liberty or death; don’t tread on me.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, Recreation Lawyer, Ski Lawyer, Paddlesports Lawyer, Cycling Lawyer, Recreational Lawyer, Fitness Lawyer, Rec Lawyer, Challenge Course Lawyer, Ropes Course Lawyer, Zip Line Lawyer, Rock Climbing Lawyer, Adventure Travel Lawyer, Outside Lawyer, Recreation Lawyer, Ski Lawyer, Paddlesports Lawyer, Cycling Lawyer, #RecreationalLawyer, #FitnessLawyer, #RecLawyer, #ChallengeCourseLawyer, #RopesCourseLawyer, #ZipLineLawyer, #RockClimbingLawyer, #AdventureTravelLawyer, #OutsideLawyer, #helmet, Bicycle Dealer, #CPSC, #ASTM, #ANSI, #Snell,

 

WordPress Tags: helmets,Does,article,industry,magazine,attention,retailers,tool,retailer,Besides,sales,Here,bike,life,customers,protection,helmet,importance,dangers,statistics,injuries,Insurance,Institute,Highway,IIHS,States,Consumer,Product,Commission,CPSC,testimony,graph,Bicyclist,deaths,Total,landings,Kennedy,assignation,World,injury,Absolute,fabrication,accident,Whether,evaluation,money,factors,example,Just,percentage,cancer,population,statistic,products,laws,agency,ASTM,ANSI,Snell,Cyclists,vehicles,impact,zero,Pedestrian,Intersection,Indices,drivers,Road,Bicycles,examples,consumers,information,manufacturer,lawsuit,detriment,fact,readers,Cheap,journalism,parents,Studies,Deserve,Doctors,Argue,Against,Mandatory,death,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,accidents,Lawyer,Paddlesports,Recreational,Line,RecreationalLawyer,FitnessLawyer,RecLawyer,ChallengeCourseLawyer,RopesCourseLawyer,ZipLineLawyer,RockClimbingLawyer,AdventureTravelLawyer,OutsideLawyer,Bicycle,Dealer,storeowner,bicyclists,weren,cyclist,upon

 


Auto Service Company to offer Bicycle Insurance, It All ready offers Rides

http://betterworldclub.com/go_forward/index.htm
http://betterworldclub.com/go_forward/index.htm
April 27, 2012
GET MOVING
Better World Club to Offer Bicycle Insurance!New Program to be One of the First in America

The Better World Club will soon be offering one of the nation’s only bike insurance policies. Until this year, cyclists in the U.S. could only obtain protection piecemeal through their auto, homeowner, or health insurance. We are thrilled to announce that we will soon be adding bike-specific insurance to our already-groundbreaking nationwide bicycle roadside assistance program. It will include both medical and liability coverage, with optional coverage available for property damage and theft.
bike.jpg
We could use your help to get this program up and spinning! If you’re a cyclist, please answer a few questions about our bike insurance by clicking here.

If you know other cyclists or local bike organizations who might be interested, spread the word.

forward2.gif

We fight for everyone’s right to use the road, and for their right to be safe while doing so. We’ve supported safe passing laws, opposed the removal of bike and pedestrian infrastructure funding, and worked with the League of American Bicyclists to provide great incentives to our non-driving members. Now that we’ve convinced insurers to give cyclists the same protection as motorists, we’re ready to show the nation that “alternative” transit doesn’t have to mean facing four lanes of traffic with only a helmet to protect you.

 

 

SPECIAL CAMPAIGN
Join Us in the National Bike Challenge!We’re Throwing Down the Gauntlet and Stepping Up to the Plate

Not to mention mixing metaphors. But seriously, folks! An alliance of heavy-hitting bike organizations (including our obvious crush, the League of American Bicyclists) has started a new nation-wide bicycle commute challenge. The program runs May 1 to August 31, and has the goal of uniting 50,000 people to bike 10 million miles. We aren’t sure if they’re ambitious or crazy, but either way, we want in on the action. We’ve signed up a team, and think you should do the same! The user-friendly website helps you track your miles, and participants can win prizes ranging from water bottles to cycling trips through California’s wine country. We have our corkscrew multi-tool all sharpened and ready. Click here to read more!

NatBikeChallenge-header.jpg

Enhanced by Zemanta

If you ride a bike, you can help save wildlife, watch for road kill

You do it anyway; road kill is a mess to clean off a bike, if you don’t even go down after hitting it.

Adventurers and Scientists for Conservation is attempting to have cyclists note road kill in an effort to track wildlife. It seems to be working; California cyclists have logged more than 17,000 observations into the system from just 708 riders.

To make an observation you simply go to the website and hit the button Enter a Road Kill Observation.

Do Something

Sign up. You have nothing lose, and wildlife may gain. Besides anything done to protect wildlife from cars, usually has a good result for cyclists.

Go to Adventurers and Scientists for Conservation and sign up today and start recording those splotches on the road.

See Roadkill kill and Roadies, A Match Made in Biologist’s Heaven

It’s easy; I just recorded my first a Fox squirrel (Sciurus Niger) who was not faster than a car.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, Recreation Lawyer, Ski Lawyer, Paddlesports Lawyer, Cycling Lawyer, Recreational Lawyer, Fitness Lawyer, Rec Lawyer, Challenge Course Lawyer, Ropes Course Lawyer, Zip Line Lawyer, Rock Climbing Lawyer, Adventure Travel Lawyer, Outside Lawyer, Recreation Lawyer, Ski Lawyer, Paddlesports Lawyer, Cycling Lawyer, #RecreationalLawyer, #FitnessLawyer, #RecLawyer, #ChallengeCourseLawyer, #RopesCourseLawyer, #ZipLineLawyer, #RockClimbingLawyer, #AdventureTravelLawyer, #OutsideLawyer, Adventurers and Scientists for Conservation, #Roadkill, Road Kill, #Cycling, #Cyclists,

WordPress Tags: bike,wildlife,road,Adventurers,Scientists,Conservation,effort,California,system,riders,observation,Enter,Kill,Sign,Besides,cars,Roadkill,Roadies,Match,Made,Biologist,Heaven,Sciurus,Niger,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents,Lawyer,Paddlesports,Recreational,Line,RecreationalLawyer,FitnessLawyer,RecLawyer,ChallengeCourseLawyer,RopesCourseLawyer,ZipLineLawyer,RockClimbingLawyer,AdventureTravelLawyer,OutsideLawyer,Cyclists


The standard of care for a ropes or challenge course changes based on who is running it and who is using it

Linthwaite v. Mount Sinai Union Free School District, 2011 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 6525; 2011 NY Slip Op 33569U

A school owes a higher degree of care to students then a non-school.

English: Challenge Course Low Element, The Wall

This decision was based on a motion for summary judgment filed by the defendants in this matter. The court denied the motion for summary judgment because there were numerous facts at issue. If there are facts that cannot be resolved or are at dispute a motion for summary judgment cannot be granted. The basis for denial was the motion filed by the defendants was deficient on several grounds.

The plaintiff was a student of the defendant. She was participating in a rope’s course described by the court as a challenge by choice event. She was injured when she fell off a low element wall, a wall, attempting to help another student over the wall. Her complaint alleged the defendants had actual and constructive notice of the dangerous conditions which lead to her injury.

The defendant argued the plaintiff assumed the risk of the activity, that it was not negligent in its supervision, and that it did not fail to provide a safe place.

So?

Because the defendant was a school, the court reviewed the standard of care that a school owed to a student.

Schools are under a duty to adequately supervise the students in their charge and they will be held liable for foreseeable injuries proximately related to the absence of adequate supervision. The school’s standard of duty to a student is what a reasonable prudent parent would have done under the same circumstances. “The standard for determining whether a school was negligent in executing its supervisory responsibility is, whether a parent of ordinary prudence, placed in the identical situation and armed with the same information, would invariably have provided greater supervision”

Schools are under a duty to adequately supervise its students and can be held liable for foreseeable injuries proximately caused by the failure of supervision. The standard of care for a school is higher than the standard of care for a commercial challenge course, meaning the school owes a higher degree of review and supervision to prevent injuries of students.

The plaintiff must show that the school had sufficient specific knowledge or notice of the dangerous condition or conduct and the breach of the duty to supervise was the cause of the injury.

In order to support its motion the defendants presented attorney affidavits, pleadings and a report from its expert witness. The report from the expert witness went through all the issues and said the school met the standard of care for each of those issues. However, the expert witness failed to attach or explain the standards, failed to identify any support or identify any support for his opinions, and the judge ignored the report.

The expert witness just can’t state a fact; the fact or opinion in the report must be substantiated by research, experience or other information in the field. Worse the expert kept referring to the work of a builder in the industry and then never produced any proof from the builder.

Neither the expert or either party has submitted a copy of the industry standards for Project Adventure, the number and positioning of spotters for the specific activity, the student to adult ratio, the instructions given to spotters, or the instructions to be provided to students participating in the event pursuant to the industry standard.

The next issue that the court quickly dismissed was the extension of the assumption of the risk defense labeled challenge by choice. A witness for the defense testified that the plaintiff was informed the event was a challenge by choice activity and what that meant. Meaning the plaintiff did not have to participate in any or all the activities.

However, the plaintiff came back and testified that during the activity she was told she had to undertake the wall. “However, when it came time for the wall activity, she and her friends were told they had to do it; they were not told that there would be repercussions if they did not do it.” This is enough to create a factual issue that defeats a motion for summary judgment.

This is another problem in this type of activity. The challenge by choice theory is usually repudiated by the defendant during the activity.

The court then listed all the issues the plaintiff had introduced that were still at issue.

Additional factual issues exist as to whether the supervision and spotting was adequate, whether the spotters were properly trained and instructed, and whether a parent of ordinary prudence, placed in the identical situation and armed with the same information, would have provided greater supervision to the students, including adequate placement and training of the appropriate number of spotters.

The defendant’s expert witness had covered all of these issues; however, he had failed to support his opinion in his report with the standards he constantly referred to:

Although Mr. Demas averred that the use of helmets, matting, or the belay system is not consistent with industry standards, he does not state what the industry standard is, and whether the failure to provide such safety equipment is inconsistent with industry standards.

The defendant’s motion for summary judgment was denied.

So Now What?

A school can rarely use a release to stop lawsuits. In New York, it may or not have worked anyway because of New York laws on releases. See States that do not Support the Use of a Release and New York Law Restricting the Use of Releases.

However, the assumption of risk defense could have been stronger if pre-activity work had been done to support the defense.

English: Zig Zag Challenge Course Low Element

Assumption of the risk usually means the person assuming the risk knows about, understands and assumes those risks. See Assumption of the Risk. Those risks can be explained in a way that can be reproduced for the court such as a video. For a great example of how this can be done see the OARSWhitewater Orientation Video Series. These videos cover 90% of the risks of whitewater. A plaintiff would be hard-pressed to argue they did not know and understand the risks if they saw the videos.

To prove the client saw the videos, you can have the client prove it in writing. A written (express) assumption of the risk document is a great way to prove the plaintiff assumed the risk. The document can list the major risks and the ones that occur frequently. A jurisdiction and venue clause can be included as well as a statement saying the client has seen and understood the videos.

Plaintiffs will always argue that they were told incorrectly, did not understand, or as in this case, were told conflicting, things that lead to their injury. If your only defense is assumption of the risk, you must be prepared to prove that your version of what happened as well as well, the plaintiff knew and assumed is the only version.

You also need to make sure your expert witness report will meet the scrutiny of the court.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, Recreation Lawyer, Ski Lawyer, Paddlesports Lawyer, Cycling Lawyer, Recreational Lawyer, Fitness Lawyer, Rec Lawyer, Challenge Course Lawyer, Ropes Course Lawyer, Zip Line Lawyer, Rock Climbing Lawyer, Adventure Travel Lawyer, Outside Lawyer, Recreation Lawyer, Ski Lawyer, Paddlesports Lawyer, Cycling Lawyer, #RecreationalLawyer, #FitnessLawyer, #RecLawyer, #ChallengeCourseLawyer, #RopesCourseLawyer, #ZipLineLawyer, #RockClimbingLawyer, #AdventureTravelLawyer, #OutsideLawyer, Ropes Course, Challenge Course, Climbing Wall, Challenge by Choice, Mount Sinai Union Free School District, Sachem School District, #NY, New York, #AR, Assumption of the Risk,

WordPress Tags: Linthwaite,Mount,Sinai,Union,Free,School,District,Misc,LEXIS,Slip,degree,students,decision,judgment,defendants,basis,denial,plaintiff,student,defendant,event,complaint,injury,supervision,Schools,injuries,absence,prudence,situation,information,failure,knowledge,attorney,affidavits,opinions,fact,opinion,Worse,builder,industry,Neither,Project,Adventure,ratio,instructions,extension,assumption,repercussions,theory,Additional,placement,Although,Demas,helmets,system,equipment,lawsuits,York,laws,States,Support,Release,Releases,person,Risk,example,OARS,Whitewater,Orientation,Video,Series,client,jurisdiction,venue,clause,statement,Plaintiffs,version,scrutiny,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Tourism,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents,Lawyer,Paddlesports,Recreational,Line,RecreationalLawyer,FitnessLawyer,RecLawyer,ChallengeCourseLawyer,RopesCourseLawyer,ZipLineLawyer,RockClimbingLawyer,AdventureTravelLawyer,OutsideLawyer,Wall,Choice,Sachem,whether,spotters


Linthwaite v. Mount Sinai Union Free School District, 2011 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 6525; 2011 NY Slip Op 33569U

Linthwaite v. Mount Sinai Union Free School District, 2011 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 6525; 2011 NY Slip Op 33569U

[**1] Rebecca Linthwaite, Plaintiff, – against – Mount Sinai Union Free School District and Sachem School District, Defendants. Index No. 09-26360

09-26360

SUPREME COURT OF NEW YORK, SUFFOLK COUNTY

2011 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 6525; 2011 NY Slip Op 33569U

December 28, 2011, Decided

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS UNCORRECTED AND WILL NOT BE PUBLISHED IN THE PRINTED OFFICIAL REPORTS.

CORE TERMS: summary judgment, supervision, industry standards, school district, spotters, adventure, spotting, teacher, rope, certified transcript, entitlement, notice, supporting papers, factual issues, issues of fact, extracurricular activity, citations omitted, participating, supervising, proximately, positioning, photograph, opposing, platform, matter of law, notice of claim, cross claims, issue of liability, claims asserted, prima facie

COUNSEL: [*1] For Plaintiff: GLYNN MERCEP & PURCELL LLP, Stony Brook, New York.

For Mount Sinai UFSD, Defendant: CONGDON, FLAHERTY, O’CALLAGHAN, et al., Uniondale, New York.

For Sachem SD, Defendant: DONAHUE, MCGAHAN, CATALANO, et al., Jericho, New York.

JUDGES: PRESENT: Hon. W. GERARD ASHER, Justice of the Supreme Court.

OPINION BY: W. GERARD ASHER

OPINION

Upon the following papers numbered 1 to 46 read on these motions for summary judgment; Notice of Motion/ Order to Show Cause and supporting papers (001) 1-14; Notice of Cross Motion and supporting papers (002) 15-34; Answering Affidavits and supporting papers 35-39; Replying Affidavits and supporting papers 40-41; 42-44; Other 45-46, (and after hearing counsel in support and opposed to the motion) it is,

ORDERED that motion (001) by the defendant, Mount Sinai Union Free School District, pursuant to CPLR 3212 for summary judgment dismissing the complaint on the issue of liability is denied; and it is further

ORDERED that motion (002) by the defendant, Sachem Central School, pursuant to CPLR 3212 for summary judgment dismissing the complaint and cross claims asserted against it on the issue of liability is denied.

In this action, the plaintiff asserts that the defendants, Sachem [*2] School District (“Sachem”) and Mount Sinai Union Free School District (“Mount Sinai”), were negligent in failing to provide proper instruction and safety equipment, and in supervising the plaintiff while she was taking part in a Mount [**2] plaintiff, after having climbed to the top of a ten foot climbing wall in a “challenge by choice” event, tried to help another student over the wail, lost her balance, and fell backwards. The plaintiff asserts that the defendants had actual and constructive notice of the dangerous conditions which caused her to sustain injury.

In motion (001), the defendant, Mount Sinai, seeks summary judgment dismissing the complaint on the basis that it was not negligent in supervising the plaintiff or in failing to provide a safe and padded area and to warn students not to help others over the wall. It further asserts that the plaintiff assumed the risk of the extracurricular activity, that it exercised reasonable care, that the plaintiff’s injuries were not the result of any breach of duty owed to the plaintiff, that the climbing wall was not located on the grounds of Mount Sinai, and that Mount Sinai did not maintain the wall.

In motion (002), Sachem seeks summary [*3] judgment dismissing the complaint and cross claims against it on the basis that it did not breach any duty to the plaintiff, and that its alleged negligence did not proximately cause the injuries claimed by the plaintiff.

The proponent of a summary judgment motion must make a prima facie showing of entitlement to judgment as a matter of law, tendering sufficient evidence to eliminate any material issues of fact from the case. To grant summary judgment it must clearly appear that no material and triable issue of fact is presented (Friends of Animals v Associated Fur Mfrs., 46 NY2d 1065, 390 N.E.2d 298, 416 NYS2d 790 [1979]; Sillman v Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation, 3 NY2d 395, 144 N.E.2d 387, 165 NYS2d 498 [1957]). The movant has the initial burden of proving entitlement to summary judgment (Winegrad v N.Y.U. Medical Center, 64 NY2d 851, 476 N.E.2d 642, 487 NYS2d 316 [1985]). Failure to make such a showing requires denial of the motion, regardless of the sufficiency of the opposing papers (Winegrad v N.Y.U. Medical Center, supra). Once such proof has been offered, the burden then shifts to the opposing party, who, in order to defeat the motion for summary judgment, must proffer evidence in admissible form…and must “show [*4] facts sufficient to require a trial of any issue of fact” (CPLR 3212 [b]; Zuckerman v City of New York, 49 NY2d 557, 404 N.E.2d 718, 427 NYS2d 595 [1980]). The opposing party must assemble, lay bare and reveal his proof in order to establish that the matters set forth in his pleadings are real and capable of being established (Castro v Liberty Bus Co., 79 AD2d 1014, 435 NYS2d 340 [2d Dept 1981]).

In support of motion (001), Mount Sinai has submitted, inter alia, an attorney’s affirmation; copies of the notice of claim dated July 2, 2008, summons and complaint, its answer with a cross claim asserted against Sachem, discovery demands, and plaintiff’s verified bill of particulars; a photograph of the wall; copy of the unsigned but certified transcript of the General Municipal Law 50-h hearing of Rebecca Linthwaite dated January 8, 2009; copies of the signed and certified transcript of the examination before trial of Rebecca Linthwaite dated September 21, 2010; the unsigned but certified transcript of Margaret Tuttie on behalf of Sachem dated November 29, 2010; the signed transcript of Karen Blumenthal on behalf of Mount Sinai dated November 29, 2010; and the affidavit of Kenneth R. Demas dated March 15, [*5] 2011, with attendant curriculum vitae.

In support of motion (002), Sachem has submitted, inter alia, two attorney’s affirmations; copies of the notices of claim dated July 2, 2008 with a copy of a photograph of a wall; a copy of the summons and complaint, defendants’ respective answers with cross claims, Mount Sinai’s answer to the cross [**3] claim, plaintiff’s verified bills of particulars: photographs of the wall; a copy of the signed General Municipal Law 50-h transcript of Rebecca Linthwaite dated January 8, 2009; copies of the signed transcript of the examination before trial of Rebecca Linthwaite dated September 21, 2010; Mission Statement by Sachem; the signed and certified transcript of Margaret Tuttle on behalf of Sachem dated November 29, 2010; another copy of the Mission Statement of Sachem with annexed letter from Karen Blumenthal, undated, and a copy of the student accident report signed by Karen Blumenthal; the signed transcript of the examination before trial of Karen Blumenthal on behalf of Mount Sinai dated November 29, 2010; the affidavit of Kenneth R. Demas dated March 15, 2011 with attendant curriculum vitae; and a demand and response to the demand for discovery and [*6] inspection.

Schools are under a duty to adequately supervise the students in their charge and they will be held liable for foreseeable injuries proximately related to the absence of adequate supervision (Mirand v City of New York, 84 NY2d 44, 637 N.E.2d 263, 614 NYS2d 372 [1994]). The school’s standard of duty to a student is what a reasonable prudent parent would have done under the same circumstances (NY PJI 2:227). “The standard for determining whether a school was negligent in executing its supervisory responsibility is, [w]hether a parent of ordinary prudence, placed in the identical situation and armed with the same information, would invariably have provided greater supervision” (Mirand v City of New York, 190 AD2d 282, 598 NYS2d 464, aff’d 84 NY2d 44, 637 N.E.2d 263, 614 NYS2d 372 [1994]; see, In the Matter of the Claim of Jane Doe v Board of Education of Penfield School District, et al, 2006 NY Slip Op 51615U, 12 Misc3d 1197A, 824 NYS2d 768 [Sup. Ct. of New York, Monroe County 2006]).

As set forth in Bowles v The Board of Education of the City of New York and the City of New York, 15 Misc. 3d 1110[A], 839 N.Y.S.2d 431, 2007 NY Slip op 50573[U] [Supreme Court of New York, Kings County 2007], “Schools are under a duty to adequately supervise the students [*7] in their charge and they will be held liable for foreseeable injuries proximately related to the absence of adequate supervision…. To find that a school district has breached its duty to provide adequate supervision, a plaintiff must show that the district had sufficient specific knowledge or notice of the dangerous conduct and that the alleged breach was the proximate cause of the injuries sustained…. Moreover, when an accident occurs in so short a span of time that even the most intense supervision could not have prevented it any lack of supervision is not the proximate cause of the injury and summary judgment in favor of the [defendant school district] is warranted.” citing, Ronan v School District of the City of New Rochelle, citations omitted, quoting Mirand v City of New York, citations omitted, Nocilla v Middle Country School Dist., citations omitted.

Based upon the evidentiary submissions, it is determined that neither Sachem nor Mount Sinai have established prima facie entitlement to summary judgement dismissing the complaint due to the existence of factual issues in the moving papers which preclude summary judgment.

Kenneth Demas set forth in his affidavit that he has been [*8] in the adventure education field since 1982 and has been certified as a national trainer for Project Adventure for 23 years. He set forth the transcripts and materials reviewed and states that the level of supervision was appropriate and in keeping with the nature of the activity. He stated that the Sachem teacher. Margaret Tuttle, was in a position which enabled her to move to either direction in front of or behind the wall, and permitted her to move to an appropriate position in the event that additional spotting was required. He states that both teachers were placed appropriately. He continues that both teachers responded to the loss of balance of Rebecca [**4] in addition to other spotters being present. He continues that the instructions given by Ms. Tuttle was appropriate and in keeping with the accepted model for instruction on this activity. While explaining the challenge to the group, Ms. Tuttle walked the group to the front and rear of the wall and explained the responsibilities associated with each side. She was clear that students were spotters from beginning to end. Demas continues that instruction in any Adventure Education program never explains how to do a particular challenge, [*9] as students, while working together, are to utilize previously learned concepts and experiences to solve the problem. He continues that the wall is considered a low element, and that spotting is the accepted safety procedure for the activity. The use of helmets, matting, and the belay systems is not consistent with industry standards, Demas continues that level 2 certification, which both Karen Blumenthal of Mount Sinai and Tuttle have, involves both a written test and hands on application of skills, such as quality and clarity of instructions, as well as spotting technique, positioning, and practice.

The affidavit of Mr. Demas is not supported by admissible evidence. Expert testimony is limited to facts in evidence (see Allen v Uh, 82 AD3d 1025, 919 NYS2d 179 [2d Dept 2011]; Hornbrook v Peak Resorts, Inc. 194 Misc2d 273, 754 NYS2d 132 [Sup Ct, Tomkins County 2002]; Marzuillo v Isom, 277 AD2d 362, 716 NYS2d 98 [2d Dept 2000]; Stringile v Rothman, 142 AD2d 637, 530 NYS2d 838 [2d Dept 1988]; O’Shea v Sarro, 106 AD2d 435, 482 NYS2d 529 [2d Dept 1984]), which evidence has not been provided herein. Neither the expert or either party has submitted a copy of the industry standards for Project [*10] Adventure, [*11] the number and positioning of spotters for the specific activity, the student to adult ratio, the instructions given to spotters, or the instructions to be provided to students participating in the event pursuant to the industry standard. Although Demas avers that teacher training involves spotting technique, positioning and practice, he does not set forth the standards for the same or aver that such was utilized during the event in which the plaintiff sustained injury. The exact number of students participating has not been established, as Ms. Blumenthal stated she had about fifty students in her two classes and was unsure how many students attended the field trip, but thought it was about 40 students. There was only one teacher supervising the students until Ms. Blumenthal arrived at that particular event, immediately prior to the plaintiff’s fall. Although the defendants claim that Project Adventure is an extracurricular activity and that the plaintiff assumed the risk of the activity, the plaintiff testified that this class was taken in place of the usual physical education class. Thus whether the class was for credit or was an extracurricular activity has not been established.

There [*12] was testimony by Ms. Blumenthal that the event in which the plaintiff was injured was “challenge by choice”, meaning each student did not have to participate in the event. However, the plaintiff testified that her understanding of “challenge by choice” was that she could do the activity by her own free will and that no one was to be forced into an activity. However, when it came time for the wall activity, she and her friends were told they had to do it; they were not told that there would be repercussions if they did not do it. Thus, there are factual issues concerning the definition of “challenge by choice”, if the students had a choice as to participating in the event, or whether there was pressure exerted on them to participate.

There are further factual issues concerning whether the students were properly instructed with regard to the presence and the use of the ropes on the back of the wall, and whether the ropes were suitable to stabilize the student and prevent the student from falling off the narrow platform. The [**5] plaintiff testified that on the date of the incident, there were no mats or other safety precautions. The rope that was on the back wall was used for walking down [*13] the wall and was not there to stabilize when up on the platform. She never noticed loops on the ropes. Ms. Tuttle testified that she tells students there are ropes to put a hand in, if needed, and that there will be spoilers to help them walk down. Additional factual issues exist as to whether the supervision and spotting was adequate, whether the spotters were properly trained and instructed, and whether a parent of ordinary prudence, placed in the identical situation and armed with the same information, would have provided greater supervision to the students including adequate placement and training of the appropriate number of spotters. Although Mr. Demas averred that the use of helmets, matting, or the belay system is not consistent with industry standards, he does not state what the industry standard is, and whether the failure to provide such safety equipment is inconsistent with industry standards. A further question exists as to whether the platform was constructed pursuant to industry standards.

Since defendants failed to establish their entitlement to judgment as a matter of law, the burden has not shifted to the plaintiff to raise a triable issue of tact (see, Krayn v Torella, 40 A.D.3d 588, 833 NYS2d 406, NY Slip Op 03885 [2d Dept 2007] [*14] ; Walker v Village of Ossining, 18 AD3d 867, 796 NYS2d 658 [2d Dept 2005]).

Accordingly, motions (001) and (002) by Sachem and Mount Sinai for summary judgment dismissing the complaint are denied.

Date: Dec. 28, 2011

/s/ W. Gerard Asher

J.S.C.


Study Reveals That The Colorado River Is The Top Employer In The Southwest U.S.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Protect The Flows, http://protectflows.com/creating-jobs/

Colorado River Is The Top Employer In The Southwest U.S. and Major Economic Driver

“The Colorado River is the economic, cultural and social backbone of the Southwest. This is true for recreational uses of the river as well, as today’s report clearly demonstrates.”


Sierra Designs / Kelty / Ultimate Directions / Slumberjack / Sample Sale June 8-10 Boulder!


Win a camping experience with Coleman and National Wildlife Federation

Hey Everyone- this is a pretty cool local opportunity to get outdoors.

Win a camping experience with Coleman and NWF.

Win a night under the stars and new camping equipment for your family by visiting one of the Denver area blogs below. To enter, submit a brief essay about why your family would enjoy camping with us; Coleman will provide everything you need-really cool stuff! Feel free to pass along. To learn more about the Great American Backyard Campout go to: http://www.nwf.org/Get-Outside/Great-American-Backyard-Campout.aspx

www.milehighmamas.com

www.coloradomoms.com

www.myrockymtnmommy.com

www.coloradomountainmom.com

www.mooseandtater.com

National Wildlife Federation

Rocky Mountain Regional Center

2995 Baseline Rd. Suite 300

Boulder, CO 80303

Keep up with the movement to get Colorado Kids Outdoors at www.facebook.com/coloradokidsoutdoors

Enhanced by Zemanta

L.L. Bean and Point 65 to creat kayak with 100 L.L. Bean Employees

L.L.Beanto attempt getting 100 employees into world’s longest modular kayak in celebration of its 100th Anniversary during Annual PaddleSports Weekend, June 1-3

The event will also feature free boat testing, demonstrations, clinics, kid’s activities, guided kayak tours, free oceanside cookout, live music and great deals.

FREEPORT, ME.—As part of its ongoing 100th Anniversary celebration, L.L.Bean will attempt to get 100 employees into a uniquely built kayak that is nearly 500’ long during their 31st Annual PaddleSports Weekend. This could be a world-record for the longest modular kayak ever and if successful, L.L.Bean will submit it to Guinness World Records for consideration. The unique kayak being used for the attempt, the Point 65N Modular Kayak, is able to be joined together in sections, thus creating a kayak that will be approximately 500’ long–possibly the longest ever. The attempt will be made on Saturday, June 2nd at 11 a.m. at the L.L.Bean Paddling Center on Lower Flying Point in Freeport, Maine. The public is welcome to attend this event as well as all of the other family-fun activities at the Paddling Center over the weekend. Free shuttles will be available to take people to and from the Flagship Store all weekend long.

“What a perfect, fun way to infuse the essence of our 100th Anniversary, as well as our outdoor spirit into this event,” said Scot Balentine, L.L.Bean’s senior developer for outdoor equipment. “The 100 employees that are taking part are very excited to be sharing in this fun and historic moment. To set a new world record would simply put an exclamation point on what will no doubt be an already exhilarating experience.”

Other event highlights for the PaddleSports Weekend include a variety of waterfront activities at the L.L.Bean Paddling Center just minutes from the store on Saturday and Sunday, such as a free oceanside cookout, free boat testing with hundreds of kayaks, stand-up paddleboards and canoes. Plus folks will have the chance to speak with industry vendors and experts. In addition, there will be live music with the Eric Bettencourt on Saturday and Putnam Smith on Sunday, craft making for kids and more. Free shuttles will be running all weekend long to and from the Flagship Store and the Paddling Center.

The L.L.Bean Outdoor Discovery Schools will also offer 90-minute kayak tours of beautiful Casco Bay for only $35 and an Intro to Stand-Up Paddleboarding course for only $29. The L.L.Bean Outdoor Discovery Schools will also be offering their Kayaking Discovery Course all weekend for only $20. Space is limited, so please call 888-552-3261 to reserve your spot.

At the L.L.Bean Campus of Stores in downtown Freeport, there are even more terrific events such as demonstrations and clinics on everything from how to get into stand-up paddleboarding, selecting the right paddle, paddling techniques, as well as non-profit guests, vendors and much more. Special promotions start Friday and include 20% off the purchase of kayaks, stand-up paddleboards, canoes and Thule® car racks. L.L.Bean will also be offering a free extension middle section from the world record attempt (up to a $500 value) with the purchase of a Point 65N Modular Kayak while supplies last, For more information, please visit www.llbean.com/freeport, or call 877-755-2326.

About L.L.Bean, Inc.

L.L.Bean, Inc. is a leading multi-channel merchant of quality outdoor gear and apparel. Celebrating its 100th Anniversary this year, the company was founded in 1912 by Leon Leonwood Bean and began as a one-room operation selling a single product, the Maine Hunting Shoe. While the business has grown substantially, the company remains committed to the same honest principles upon which it was built–a focus on the customer, continuous product improvement and innovation, respect for people, preservation of the natural environment and a 100% satisfaction guarantee. The 220,000 sq. ft. Flagship campus of stores in Freeport, Maine is open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year and welcomes more than three million visitors each year. L.L.Bean can be found worldwide on www.llbean.com, L.L.Bean Facebook, L.L.Bean Twitter and L.L.Bean YouTube.

Enhanced by Zemanta

“Sportsmen” bill working through congress would allow ATVs in Wilderness

ATVsComing to Your Favorite Wilderness Area

Thousand Island Lake (2997m) and Banner Peak (...

May 29, 2012

The misleadingly-named “Sportsmen’s Heritage Act” has wilderness-busting
provisions that could be coming to any and all of America’s wilderness
areas.

“It’s possibly the biggest threat to this nation’s wilderness areas since
the Wilderness Act was passed in 1964,” says Tom Martin, Co-Director of
River Runners for Wilderness, “even long time wilderness defenders who
thought they’d seen it all are shocked.”

HR4089 is a combination of 4 previous bills. Although there are many
debatable elements, the worst allows what were previously illegal activities
to now occur in all areas managed as wilderness under the National Park
Service, the Forest Service, and all of the nation’s Federal land agencies.

Among activities that could be allowed are ATV use, new road construction,
mining, logging and the construction of fixed structures. In fact, the most
dangerous element of this bill is that it gives managers a blank check to
allow any activities they construe as beneficial to sportsmen.

The bill has passed the House of Representatives and a Senate Companion Bill
S2066 has been introduced with supporters such as the National Rifle
Association and sports industry groups urging a quick passage.

The Congressional Research Service (CRS), a branch of the Library of
Congress that provides in depth analysis to members of Congress and others,
outlined the threats in a recent review of the proposal. The CRS noted that
the bill’s “..language could be construed as opening wilderness areas to
virtually any activity related to hunting and fishing, even if otherwise
inconsistent with wilderness values. Despite the Wilderness Act’s explicit
ban on temporary and permanent roads, if H.R. 4089 were passed, roads
arguably could be constructed in wilderness areas.”

The report also noted that “.while it appears that timber harvest could be
allowed, it would seem difficult to harvest timber without roads or
machines.”

The entire CRS’ brief (4 page) memo is on the River Runners for Wilderness
website at http://rrfw.org/sites/default/files/CRSreport.pdf

The wilderness destroying language in this bill could easily be omitted
before final passage and we urge you to take action to insist that this is
done:

Contact your state’s Senators and ask that they not support S2066 and to
protect all provisions of The Wilderness Act.

You are also encouraged to contact lobbying supporters of HR4089 & S2066,
such as the National Rifle Association at their website, particularly if you
are a member: https://www.nraila.org/secure/contact-us.aspx and let them
know that you support the Wilderness Act as written.

You are also encouraged to write a letter to the editor of your local
newspaper. National media has largely ignored these bills and you could be
instrumental in raising awareness of the threat.

To learn more about the threats posed by this legislation, visit:
Wilderness Watch’s analysis:
http://www.wildernesswatch.org/pdf/HR%204089%20Analysis–WW.pdf.
Other advocacy group sites:
http://wilderness.org/content/sneak-attack-wilderness and
http://conservationlands.org/time-to-stop-hr-4089-in-its-tracks.

Surveys show that wilderness enjoys very broad support by our country’s
citizens and should be protected. River Runners for Wilderness will keep you
apprised of this looming disaster for our country’s precious wilderness
lands.

__._,_.___

Reply to sender | <a href=”mailto:gcpba | Reply via web post | Start a New Topic

Messages in this topic (1)

Recent Activity:

· New Members 4

Visit Your Group

Enhanced by Zemanta

The Tour of Utah is gaining status: top 5 teams will compete this year.

Liquigas-Cannondale, RadioShack-Nissan-Trek, BMC Racing Team, Rabobank Cycling Teamand Garmin-Barracuda are five of the top 12 teams that

TOOELE, UT - AUGUST 12:  George Hincapie of th...

TOOELE, UT - AUGUST 12: George Hincapie of the USA and riding for BMC Racing Team races to tenth place in the Individual Time Trial during Stage Three of the Tour of Utah at the Miller Motorsports Park on August 12, 2011 in Tooele, Utah. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)

will compete in the Tour of Utah this year.

The Tour of Utah is scheduled for August 7-12 and will be the first major cycling event after the Tour de France

Two weeks later they come to Utah for the USA Pro Challenge!

See Tour of Utah to boast 5 top teams

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, Tour of Utah, USA Pro Challenge, Cycling, Bike Racing, Cycle Racing,

 

WordPress Tags: Tour,Utah,status,teams,Liquigas,Cannondale,RadioShack,Nissan,Trek,Team,Rabobank,Garmin,Barracuda,August,event,France,Challenge,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents,Bike,Cycle

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

The Department of the Interior looking to pay to protect land and wildlife

Thank heavens most of us understand its real value!

The Department of the Interiorhas announced the start of a public process to explore expanding incentives for voluntary partnerships with private

landowners and other land stewards in an effort to help conserve imperiled wildlife. The process is part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service‘s commitment to try innovative approaches to protect and restore habitats for wildlife, improve implementation of the Endangered Species Act and strengthen local economies.

Targets for partnership will be farmers, ranchers and forest landowners, who also have a stake in ensuring the working lands remain healthy. The

Seal of the United States Department of the In...

Seal of the United States Department of the Interior (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

program hopes to give these citizens more tools and support to provide habitat for at-risk wildlife.

At the outset there will be a comment period on the ways the Fish and Wildlife Service can make existing conservation tools more effective and also improve incentives.

This program follows the announcement of a partnership between the Fish and Wildlife Service and Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service to offer assistance to farmers, ranchers and forest landowners. This Working Lands for Wildlife Initiative will prioritize $33 million in restoration actions. The initiative will model these future plans with private landowners.

See Department of the Interior Ponders Incentives to Protect Wildlife

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebo

ok: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, #Wildlife, Department of the Interior, Endangered Species Act, #Landowner, Fish and Wildlife Service, Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, Working Lands for Wildlife Initiative,

WordPress Tags: Department,Interior,wildlife,Thank,heavens,partnerships,landowners,stewards,effort,Fish,Service,commitment,habitats,implementation,Species,economies,Targets,partnership,farmers,ranchers,citizens,tools,habitat,outset,conservation,announcement,Agriculture,Natural,Resources,assistance,Lands,Initiative,million,restoration,Ponders,Protect,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents,Landowner

Enhanced by Zemanta

Product Liability takes a different turn. You must pay attention, just not rely on the CPSC.

A notice in a cycling tour website says you can ride Carbon FiberWheels on the tour.

DENVER, CO - AUGUST 28:  Levi Leipheimer ridin...

Levi Leipheimer, winner of the 2011 USA Pro Challenge and other great cycling events sponsors a GranFondo, Levi’s GranFondo. On the website is a page that states: Carbon Clincher Wheels: Please leave them at home.

Supposedly there is a very long downhill ride on the tour which in the past has resulted in the carbon fiber wheels failing. The site even has links to posts about the wheel failures.

CPSC = Consumer Product Safety Council (like all federal agencies, they are great, after the accident has all ready occurred.)

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, Carbon Clincher Wheels, GranFondo, Levi’s GranFondo, Levi Leipheimer,

 

WordPress Tags: Product,attention,CPSC,Carbon,Fiber,Wheels,Levi,Leipheimer,winner,Challenge,events,GranFondo,Clincher,failures,Consumer,Council,agencies,accident,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents,website

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Recent Colorado case defines Attractive Nuisance

SW, a minor v. Towers Boat Club, Inc., 2012 COA 77; 2012 Colo. App. LEXIS 642

If the child is already on the property, there is no attractive nuisance.

In this case an eleven year old boy was on property playing in a rented inflatable structure. The structure had been rented by the landowner. The structure blue into the air injuring the child.

The parents claimed the landowner was negligent and the landowner was liable under Colorado’s premises liability statute. The trial court granted a motion for summary judgment on both claims and the plaintiff appealed the issue of the statutory premises liability claims.

Colorado like most states divides people on the land as one of three types, trespassers, licensees or invitees. The landowner owes different levels of protection or owes greater liability protection based on how the person is on the land.

A trespasser may recover only for damages willfully or deliberately caused by the landowner.

(b) A licensee may recover only for damages caused:

(I) By the landowner’s unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care with respect to dangers created by the landowner of which the landowner actually knew; or

(II) By the landowner’s unreasonable failure to warn of dangers not created by the landowner which are not ordinarily present on property of the type involved and of which the landowner actually knew.

An invitee may recover for damages caused by the landowner’s unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care to protect against dangers of which he actually knew or should have known.

The parties and the court concluded that the plaintiff was a licensee. As such the landowner had a duty to exercise reasonable care with respect to the dangers created by the landowner.

The plaintiff argued that the landowner owed a greater duty because of the attractive nuisance doctrine.

The attractive nuisance doctrine was developed to:

…provide legal relief to certain trespassing children who otherwise would be barred from recovery because of Colorado’s rule that a landowner owes no duty to make or keep premises safe for a trespasser.

A landowner was liable for injuries to children (minors under the age of fourteen) if something on the land or maintained on the land by the landowner attracted the minor to become a trespasser and consequently injured the trespassing minor.

…plaintiff may recover on a claim for attractive nuisance if, among other things, the plaintiff “(was attracted onto the premises by [an unusual activity being carried on, on the premises] [or] [by an unusual condition, other than a natural condition, existing on the premises]) (or) (was on the premises with the express or implied consent of the defendant)”

..attractive nuisance doctrine “imposes a duty of care on landowners to prevent serious harm to trespassing children

So?

The analysis was lengthy but very simple. The child was already on the land, so therefore the attractive nuisance doctrine did not apply. “The doctrine consists in maintaining an attraction which entices to trespass, not merely entices one after he has become a trespasser…

The doctrine only applies if the child was a trespasser. Consequently the child was not a trespasser by definition of the statute and because the child was already on the land.

So Now What?

This takes a possible claim away from injured minors who are already on the land. The attractive nuisance doctrine did not give a lot of latitude to the landowner in possible defenses. If the child was a trespasser, was attracted to something on the land and was injured, the landowner was liable.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, Recreation Lawyer, Ski Lawyer, Paddlesports Lawyer, Cycling Lawyer, Recreational Lawyer, Fitness Lawyer, Rec Lawyer, Challenge Course Lawyer, Ropes Course Lawyer, Zip Line Lawyer, Rock Climbing Lawyer, Adventure Travel Lawyer, Outside Lawyer, Recreation Lawyer, Ski Lawyer, Paddlesports Lawyer, Cycling Lawyer, #RecreationalLawyer, #FitnessLawyer, #RecLawyer, #ChallengeCourseLawyer, #RopesCourseLawyer, #ZipLineLawyer, #RockClimbingLawyer, #AdventureTravelLawyer, #OutsideLawyer, #landowner, Attractive Nuisance, #trespassers, #licensees, #invitees, #Colorado, #CO

WordPress Tags: Recent,Colorado,Attractive,Nuisance,Towers,Boat,Club,Colo,LEXIS,landowner,parents,premises,statute,judgment,plaintiff,trespassers,licensees,protection,person,trespasser,licensee,failure,dangers,doctrine,relief,recovery,injuries,minors,defendant,landowners,analysis,attraction,definition,latitude,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,managers,helmet,accidents,Lawyer,Paddlesports,Recreational,Line,RecreationalLawyer,FitnessLawyer,RecLawyer,ChallengeCourseLawyer,RopesCourseLawyer,ZipLineLawyer,RockClimbingLawyer,AdventureTravelLawyer,OutsideLawyer,invitees


SW, a minor v. Towers Boat Club, Inc., 2012 COA 77; 2012 Colo. App. LEXIS 642

SW, a minor v. Towers Boat Club, Inc., 2012 COA 77; 2012 Colo. App. LEXIS 642

SW, a minor by and through his parents and next friends, David and Rhonda Wacker; David Wacker; and Rhonda Wacker, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Towers Boat Club, Inc., Defendant-Appellee.

Court of Appeals No. 11CA0935

COURT OF APPEALS OF COLORADO, DIVISION THREE

2012 COA 77; 2012 Colo. App. LEXIS 642

April 26, 2012, Decided

NOTICE:

THIS OPINION IS NOT THE FINAL VERSION AND SUBJECT TO REVISION UPON FINAL PUBLICATION

PRIOR HISTORY: [**1]

Jefferson County District Court No. 10CV1507. Honorable Jane A. Tidball, Judge.

DISPOSITION: JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.

COUNSEL: Purvis Gray, LLP, John Purvis, Boulder, Colorado, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.

Senter Goldfarb & Rice, L.L.C., Arthur Kutzer, Joel Palmer, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-Appellee.

JUDGES: Opinion by JUDGE TERRY. Roy, J., concurs. Gabriel, J., specially concurs.

OPINION BY: TERRY

OPINION

[*P1] As an issue of first impression, we address whether, under the premises liability statute, section 13-21-115, C.R.S. 2011, a child licensee may assert a claim based on the attractive nuisance doctrine. We conclude that a child licensee may not maintain such a claim.

[*P2] Plaintiffs, SW, David Wacker, and Rhonda Wacker, appeal the trial court’s summary judgment in favor of defendant, Towers Boat Club, Inc. (landowner). We affirm.

I. Background

[*P3] On August 2, 2008, SW, then eleven years old, attended a social gathering at Poudre Reservoir Number 6. While he was playing on an inflatable structure rented by landowner for the gathering, wind lifted the structure into the air and SW fell to the ground, sustaining severe injuries. Plaintiffs eventually settled the claims that they asserted against other defendants.

[*P4] Plaintiffs asserted two claims against [**2] landowner, one for negligence and the other under Colorado’s premises liability statute, section 13-21-115. Landowner moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted the motion as to plaintiffs’ negligence and premises liability claims. However, the court construed the complaint to include a claim for attractive nuisance, and denied summary judgment as to that claim.

[*P5] Landowner moved for reconsideration, arguing that the attractive nuisance doctrine was inapplicable to SW. The court agreed and dismissed plaintiffs’ attractive nuisance claim. Plaintiffs appeal only the trial court’s dismissal of the attractive nuisance claim.

II. Standard of Review

[*P6] [HN1] We review de novo an order granting a motion for summary judgment. Pierson v. Black Canyon Aggregates, Inc., 48 P.3d 1215, 1218 (Colo. 2002). [HN2] Summary judgment is appropriate only where no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Id. The nonmoving party is entitled to the benefit of all favorable inferences reasonably drawn from the undisputed facts, and all doubts are resolved against the moving party. A.C. Excavating v. Yacht Club II Homeowners Ass’n, 114 P.3d 862, 865 (Colo. 2005).

[*P7]

III. [**3] Discussion

[*P8] We are not persuaded by plaintiffs’ contention that the trial court erred in granting landowner’s motion for summary judgment.

[*P9] [HN3] Section 13-21-115(3), C.R.S. 2011, classifies entrants upon the land of another as trespassers, licensees, or invitees. As relevant here, that subsection outlines the respective duties that a landowner owes to each class, as follows:

[HN4] (3)(a) A trespasser may recover only for damages willfully or deliberately caused by the landowner.

(b) A licensee may recover only for damages caused:

(I) By the landowner’s unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care with respect to dangers created by the landowner of which the landowner actually knew; or

(II) By the landowner’s unreasonable failure to warn of dangers not created by the landowner which are not ordinarily present on property of the type involved and of which the landowner actually knew.

(c)(I). . . [A]n invitee may recover for damages caused by the landowner’s unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care to protect against dangers of which he actually knew or should have known.

§ 13-21-115(3).

[*P10] The trial court ruled that SW was a licensee, and plaintiffs do not contest that ruling on appeal. Instead, [**4] they argue that the trial court erred in ruling that, because SW was not a trespassing child who was enticed onto the property by an attractive nuisance, he could not assert a claim for attractive nuisance. Plaintiffs contend this ruling contravenes the supreme court’s holding in Gallegos v. Phipps, 779 P.2d 856, 859 (Colo. 1989). We disagree.

A. Attractive Nuisance Doctrine

[*P11] Plaintiffs argue that no Colorado appellate decision expressly holds that the attractive nuisance doctrine is limited to trespassing children. They contend that the Colorado decisions addressing attractive nuisance all involve factual scenarios in which a child was trespassing, and thus the issue of whether the doctrine can apply to licensees such as SW has not previously been decided. They further contend that, although SW has been determined to be a licensee, he should be able to invoke the attractive nuisance doctrine.

[*P12] We disagree that existing Colorado decisions, when construed together with the premises liability statute, leave any doubt about the application of the attractive nuisance doctrine, and conclude [HN5] the doctrine unequivocally applies only to children enticed by an attractive nuisance to trespass on [**5] another’s property. Thus, the doctrine cannot be applied to SW.

1. History of Attractive Nuisance Doctrine in Colorado

[*P13] The attractive nuisance doctrine developed to provide legal relief to certain trespassing children who otherwise would be barred from recovery because of Colorado’s rule that a landowner owes no duty to make or keep premises safe for a trespasser. See Hayko v. Colorado & Utah Coal Co., 77 Colo. 143, 147, 235 P. 373, 374 (1925), overruled in part by Mile High Fence Co. v. Radovich, 175 Colo. 537, 489 P.2d 308 (1971), superseded by § 13-21-115 as noted in Gallegos, 779 P.2d at 861; see also John W. Grund & J. Kent Miller, 7 Colo. Prac., Personal Injury Practice — Torts and Insurance § 19.5, at 314-15 (2d ed. 2000).

[*P14] The doctrine has since been modified, both by ensuing case law and by statute. Because the history of attractive nuisance doctrine is tied to the general history of premises liability law in Colorado, we briefly summarize the unique history of Colorado premises liability law.

[*P15] The supreme court described some of that history in Gallegos, as follows:

Until 1971, the law in Colorado governing landowner[s’] liability followed the common law’s emphasis on whether [**6] the injured party was an invitee, licensee, or trespasser. See [Mile High Fence, 175 Colo. at 541, 489 P.2d at 311]; Husser v. School Dist. No. 11, 159 Colo. 590, 593, 413 P.2d 906, 908 (1966). Under the common law, the landowner’s liability depended exclusively upon the injured party’s status. For example, a landowner had no duty to make or keep his premises safe for a trespasser. Staley v. Security Athletic Ass’n, 152 Colo. 19, 21, 380 P.2d 53, 54 (1963). If, however, the person was a licensee, the owner had a duty not to willfully or wantonly injure the person. Gotch v. K & B Packing & Provision Co., 93 Colo. 276, 278, 25 P.2d 719, 720 (1933), overruled [by Mile High Fence, 175 Colo. 537, 489 P.2d 308]. An even higher standard was owed if the person was an invitee; where an invitee was upon the owner’s land, the owner had a duty to have the land in a reasonably safe condition and to warn of concealed defects that might have been discovered in the exercise of reasonable care. Id. at 278, 25 P.2d at 720.

In 1971, Colorado’s common-law scheme governing landowner’s liability was abolished by [Mile High Fence], 175 Colo. 537, 489 P.2d 308. In [that case], the court held that the classification [**7] of one who is upon the property of another as invitee, licensee, or trespasser was no longer dispositive of the landowner’s liability or the degree of care owed by the landowner. 175 Colo. at 548, 489 P.2d at 314. Rather, the relevant inquiry was whether the landowner, in the management of the property, acted as a reasonable person in view of the probability or foreseeability of injuries to others. Id. A person’s status as an invitee, licensee, or trespasser might have some bearing on the issue of liability, but it was only one factor among many to be considered in making the determination. 175 Colo. at 548, 489 P.2d at 314-15.

Mile High Fence remained in effect until May 16, 1986, when the General Assembly enacted [the first version of] section 13-21-115 . . ., for the explicit purpose of resurrecting the common-law classification scheme laid to rest by [Mile High Fence]. Under the statute, categories analogous to trespasser, licensee, and invitee were established . . . . According to the legislators who sponsored House Bill 1205, which later became section 13-21-115, the common-law categories were reestablished because the reasonable person standard created by Mile High Fence led [**8] to unpredictable and inequitable results. Of particular concern to legislators was the perception that under Mile High Fence, the responsibility for a trespasser’s injuries was unfairly shifted from the trespasser to the landowner. Section 13-21-115 was, as one legislator put it, designed so that “responsibility falls upon the trespasser.”

Gallegos, 779 P.2d at 860-61 (footnotes omitted).

[*P16] In Gallegos, the supreme court concluded that the then-current version of section 13-21-115 was unconstitutional because it created an “inverted hierarchy” of duties, with a higher duty owed to licensees than to invitees. Applying the rational basis test for constitutional scrutiny, the court concluded that this statutory scheme was contrary to well-established common law principles, lacked a rational basis, and was unconstitutional. Id. at 862-63.

[*P17] After Gallegos was announced, the General Assembly amended section 13-21-115. As pertinent to our historical analysis, that amended section states:

[HN6] (1.5) The general assembly hereby finds and declares:

(a) That the provisions of this section were enacted in 1986 to promote a state policy of responsibility by both landowners and those upon the land as well [**9] as to assure that the ability of an injured party to recover is correlated with his status as a trespasser, licensee, or invitee;

(b) That these objectives were characterized by the Colorado supreme court as “legitimate governmental interests” in [Gallegos];

(c) That the purpose of amending this section in the 1990 legislative session is to assure that the language of this section effectuates these legitimate governmental interests by imposing on landowners a higher standard of care with respect to an invitee than a licensee, and a higher standard of care with respect to a licensee than a trespasser;

(d) That the purpose of this section is also to create a legal climate which will promote private property rights and commercial enterprise and will foster the availability and affordability of insurance;

(e) That the general assembly recognizes that by amending this section it is not reinstating the common law status categories as they existed immediately prior to [Mile High Fence,] but that its purpose is to protect landowners from liability in some circumstances when they were not protected at common law and to define the instances when liability will be imposed in the manner most consistent [**10] with the policies set forth in paragraphs (a), (c), and (d) of this subsection (1.5).

§ 13-21-115(1.5)(a)-(e).

[*P18] As part of the reenactment of section 13-21-115, the legislature revived the common law doctrine of attractive nuisance, which had been rendered unnecessary by Mile High Fence. See Grund and Miller, § 19.5, at 314; see also Vigil v. Franklin, 103 P.3d 322, 331 (Colo. 2004) (as reenacted in 1990, § 13-21-115(2) “expressly provided for the attractive nuisance doctrine”); Union Pac. R.R. Co. v. Martin, 209 P.3d 185, 188 (Colo. 2009) (in reenacting § 13-21-115, legislature “specifically singl[ed] out for continued vitality the common law doctrine of attractive nuisance”). But see Salazar v. City of Sheridan, 44 Colo. App. 443, 445-46, 618 P.2d 708, 709-10 (1980) (mentioning attractive nuisance claim brought by plaintiff); Cent. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wilson, 533 P.2d 57, 58 (Colo. App. 1975) (not published pursuant to C.A.R. 35(f)) (same).

Subsection (2) states:

[HN7] In any civil action brought against a landowner by a person who alleges injury occurring while on the real property of another and by reason of the condition of such property, or activities conducted or circumstances existing on [**11] such property, the landowner shall be liable only as provided in subsection (3) of this section. Sections 13-21-111, 13-21-111.5, and 13-21-111.7 shall apply to an action to which this section applies. This subsection (2) shall not be construed to abrogate the doctrine of attractive nuisance as applied to persons under fourteen years of age. A person who is at least fourteen years of age but is less than eighteen years of age shall be presumed competent for purposes of the application of this section.

§ 13-21-115(2) (emphasis added).

2. Revival of Attractive Nuisance Doctrine

[*P19] Plaintiffs contend that the amendment to section 13-21-115(2) changed not just the upper age limit of the children to whom it could be applied, from age eighteen to age fourteen. They contend it also did away with the attractive nuisance doctrine as it had previously existed in Colorado. In its place, they argue that principles reflected in CJI-Civ. 4th 12:4 (1998) and the Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 299 and 343B control. We disagree.

[*P20] [HN8] The premises liability statute gives no indication that the attractive nuisance doctrine as applied in the publications cited by plaintiffs, or in jurisdictions other than Colorado, [**12] is intended to supplant preexisting Colorado precedents. The only logical interpretation of subsection (2)’s incorporation of the attractive nuisance doctrine is that it is to be applied in accordance with preexisting Colorado precedents, to the extent they do not conflict with the provisions of section 13-21-115. See Grund & Miller, § 19.5, at 314 (in enacting section 13-21-115, “the legislature expressly revived the attractive nuisance doctrine”); see also Vaughan v. McMinn, 945 P.2d 404, 409 (Colo. 1997) (legislature “is presumed to be aware of the judicial precedent in an area of law when it legislates in that area”); State Engineer v. Castle Meadows, Inc., 856 P.2d 496, 504 (Colo. 1993) (same).

[*P21] We reject plaintiffs’ argument that the provisions of CJI-Civ. 12:4 should guide us in the application of attractive nuisance law. As relevant here, CJI-Civ. 12:4 provides that a plaintiff may recover on a claim for attractive nuisance if, among other things, the plaintiff “(was attracted onto the premises by [an unusual activity being carried on on the premises] [or] [by an unusual condition, other than a natural condition, existing on the premises]) (or) (was on the premises with the [**13] express or implied consent of the defendant)” (emphasis added). The italicized language is not consistent with Colorado case law, as discussed herein, and we disapprove it. See Krueger v. Ary, 205 P.3d 1150, 1154 (Colo. 2009) ( [HN9] pattern jury instructions are not law, not authoritative, and not binding on Colorado courts; they are not to be used if they do not reflect the prevailing law).

[*P22] The sections of the Restatement cited by plaintiffs do not reflect Colorado law and have not been adopted by Colorado courts, and thus are not binding here. See Bayer v. Crested Butte Mountain Resort, Inc., 960 P.2d 70, 79 (Colo. 1998). The same is true of plaintiffs’ citation to 62 Am. Jur. 2d Premises Liability § 299. We note that both 62 Am. Jur. 2d Premises Liability § 299 and the Restatement (Second) of Torts § 343B indicate that [HN10] Colorado is in the minority of states that require a trespass in order for the attractive nuisance doctrine to apply. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 339 cmt. e (1965) (citing Esquibel v. City & County of Denver, 112 Colo. 546, 151 P.2d 757 (1944)); 62 Am. Jur. 2d Premises Liability § 299 n.9 (citing Denver Tramway Corp. v. Callahan, 112 Colo. 460, 150 P.2d 798 (1944)).

[*P23] [**14] We conclude that historical Colorado attractive nuisance doctrine can easily be harmonized with other provisions of the premises liability statute, and that [HN11] the attractive nuisance doctrine has been modified by the statute only to the extent that the doctrine can no longer be applied to persons above age fourteen. § 13-21-115(2).

B. Inapplicability of Attractive Nuisance Doctrine to SW

[*P24] Plaintiffs contend that the attractive nuisance doctrine should be interpreted to apply to child trespassers, licensees, and invitees. Because such an interpretation would be inconsistent with Colorado law, we disagree.

[*P25] Colorado courts without exception have held that [HN12] the attractive nuisance doctrine may be invoked only where an attraction on land “entices children to trespass.” Hayko, 77 Colo. at 146, 235 P. at 374 (“While he [the owner of the premises] owes a duty to one invited, and some attractive agencies may amount to an invitation to a child, yet such an agency must invite to trespass and not merely after trespass.”); see also Esquibel v. City & County of Denver, 112 Colo. 546, 549, 151 P.2d 757, 758 (1944) (“[The] doctrine consists in maintaining an attraction which entices to trespass, not merely [**15] entices one after he has become a trespasser.”), overruled in part by Mile High Fence, 175 Colo. 537, 489 P.2d 308; Denver Tramway Corp. v. Garcia, 154 Colo. 417, 423, 390 P.2d 952, 956 (1964) (same); Staley v. Sec. Athletic Ass’n, 152 Colo. 19, 22-25, 380 P.2d 53, 55 (1963) (same), overruled in part by Mile High Fence, 175 Colo. 537, 489 P.2d 308; accord Garel v. Jewish Cmty. Centers, 163 Colo. 110, 112, 428 P.2d 714, 715 (1967) (noting that the Hayko rule on attractive nuisance has been “consistently followed” by the Colorado Supreme Court); Guilfoyle v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas R.R. Co., 812 F.2d 1290, 1292 (10th Cir. 1987) (attractive nuisance doctrine “imposes a duty of care on landowners to prevent serious harm to trespassing children”).

[*P26] Moreover, contrary to plaintiffs’ argument, the supreme court has explicitly stated that [HN13] “the attractive-nuisance doctrine is only an exception to the general rule limiting the liability of landowners as to [child] trespassers.” Niernberg v. Gavin, 123 Colo. 1, 3, 224 P.2d 215, 216 (1950) (emphasis added).

[*P27] Recognizing the continued vitality of that rule is consistent with the legislature’s intent. As the supreme court stated in Gallegos, by amending [**16] the premises liability statute to “re-link a landowner’s duty and an injured party’s ability to recover damages with the party’s status as an invitee, licensee, or trespasser,” the legislature intended “that a landowner’s liability should once again depend upon the landowner’s knowledge of the other person’s presence and the reason for the presence on the property.” 779 P.2d at 861.

[*P28] We therefore conclude that the common law doctrine of attractive nuisance applies only to trespassing children.

C. Equal Protection

[*P29] Plaintiffs further contend that limiting the application of the attractive nuisance doctrine to child trespassers would result in an “inverted hierarchy” of landowner duties and would thus contravene Gallegos and be unconstitutional. We are not persuaded.

[*P30] Initially, the majority notes our respectful disagreement with the assertion in the special concurrence that we need not reach the plaintiffs’ constitutional argument. Plaintiffs in essence assert that, to avoid an equal protection problem, a licensee must always receive better treatment in the law than would a trespasser, regardless of the reason for entry on the land, and that is the linchpin of their argument that they are [**17] entitled to assert an attractive nuisance claim here. Thus, we conclude that the necessity to analyze the constitutional question is not dispelled by that fact that, as recognized by the special concurrence, plaintiffs cannot establish but one element of an attractive nuisance claim, namely, enticement by an attractive nuisance to trespass.

[*P31] In Gallegos, the supreme court held that the pre-1990 version of the premises liability statute violated the plaintiffs constitutional equal protection guarantees because it “impose[d] on landowners a higher standard of care with respect to a licensee than an invitee.” 779 P.2d at 862. The court held that “[s]uch an inverted hierarchy of duties bears no rational relationship to a legitimate governmental interest,” and would deny the plaintiff equal protection of the laws. Id. (citing U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1; Colo. Const. art. II, § 25).

[*P32] In response to Gallegos, the General Assembly repealed and reenacted the premises liability statute to impose higher duties on landowners with respect to licensees than to trespassers, and higher still duties with respect to invitees than to trespassers. Vigil, 103 P.3d at 326.

[*P33] Here, in essence, plaintiffs contend [**18] that, as applied by the trial court, the attractive nuisance doctrine would violate the constitutional guarantee of equal protection of the laws and thus would be unconstitutional. See Gallegos, 779 P.2d at 863. We are not persuaded.

[*P34] ” [HN14] Because section 13-21-115 does not infringe upon a fundamental right, a suspect class, or a classification triggering an intermediate standard of review, the statute need only have some rational basis in fact and bear a rational relationship to a legitimate governmental interest to be valid.” Gallegos, 779 P.2d at 860.

[*P35] Plaintiffs argue that the duty to exercise reasonable care owed by a landowner to trespassing children under the attractive nuisance doctrine is a more expansive, general, and higher standard of care than that owed to child licensees, and that because trespassers should be the least favored of all entrants on land, such a higher standard would bear no rational relationship to a legitimate governmental interest. As support for this proposition, plaintiffs cite only CJI-Civ. 12:4, which they contend imposes on a landowner a duty to “exercise reasonable care to protect persons like [the] plaintiff from injury.” As noted above, this jury instruction [**19] is not binding Colorado law, Krueger, 205 P.3d at 1154, and plaintiffs have not provided us with any Colorado precedent that would establish that duty of care.

[*P36] We disagree that [HN15] the “reasonable care” standard imposed on landowners as to trespassing children under the attractive nuisance doctrine is a higher standard of care than is owed to child invitees under the premises liability statute. Rather, section 13-21-115 sets forth standards of reasonable care applicable to landowners, and those standards of care vary depending on the status of the entrant on land. Compare § 13-21-115(3)(b)(I)-(II) (licensee may recover only for damages caused by landowner’s “unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care with respect to dangers created by the landowner of which landowner actually knew,” or “unreasonable failure to warn of” described dangers of which landowner actually knew) (emphasis added) and § 13-21-115(3)(c)(I)-(II) (invitee may recover for damages caused by a “landowner’s unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care to protect against dangers of which he actually knew or should have known,” except that, as to agricultural or vacant land, invitee may recover for damages “caused [**20] by the landowner’s unreasonable failure to exercise reasonable care to protect against dangers of which he actually knew”) (emphasis added), with § 13-21-115(3)(a) (trespasser may recover only for damages “willfully or deliberately caused by the landowner”).

[*P37] The logical implication of plaintiffs’ argument is that, to avoid the “inverted hierarchy” equal protection problem identified in Gallegos, invitees and licensees must always receive more favorable treatment than trespassers. See § 13-21-115(3.5) (“It is the intent of the general assembly in enacting the provisions of subsection (3) of this section that the circumstances under which a licensee may recover include all of the circumstances under which a trespasser could recover and that the circumstances under which an invitee may recover include all of the circumstances under which a trespasser or a licensee could recover.”).

[*P38] However, by incorporating attractive nuisance doctrine in section 13-21-115, the legislature necessarily accepted that doctrine’s treatment of young children trespassers, who were enticed onto property by an attractive nuisance, as invitees. See United Zinc & Chem. Co. v. Britt, 258 U.S. 268, 275, 42 S. Ct. 299, 66 L. Ed. 615 (1922) (“knowingly [**21] to establish and expose . . . something that is certain to attract [children], has the legal effect of an invitation to them”); see also Denver Tramway Corp. v. Callahan, 112 Colo. at 464-65, 150 P.2d at 799-800 (“[T]here is no question but that the boy was a trespasser on the private property of defendant, unless he was ‘invited’ by an ‘attractive nuisance,’ as recognized by our decisions.”); Kopplekom v. Colorado Cement-Pipe Co., 16 Colo. App. 274, 277, 64 P. 1047, 1048 (1901) (citing with approval cases from other jurisdictions that treat children enticed by an attractive nuisance to trespass as invitees); accord Concrete Constr., Inc. v. Petterson, 216 So. 2d 221, 222 (Fla. 1968) (under attractive nuisance doctrine, a “child who enters upon another’s property in response to a special attraction is classified as an implied invitee”).

[*P39] In other words, [HN16] under the attractive nuisance doctrine, children enticed to trespass by an attractive nuisance are treated as invitees, and not as trespassers. Thus, it would not violate equal protection to treat such children more favorably than licensees such as SW if there is a rational basis for doing so. See Gallegos, 779 P.2d at 860 (applying [**22] rational basis test to classifications under premises liability act).

[*P40] We conclude that [HN17] section 13-21-115’s liability scheme reflects a rational basis for treating children induced to trespass by an attractive nuisance more favorably than child licensees. As the supreme court recognized in Gallegos, the legislature could rationally choose to treat entrants on land differently depending upon their reasons for entry on the land. Id. at 861.

[*P41] We note that the rational basis for disparate treatment of entrants on land is reflected in more than seven decades of Colorado appellate precedent. Even among trespassing children, some received the elevated treatment of invitees, while others did not. A child who was enticed by an attractive nuisance to trespass could recover for ensuing injuries, while a trespassing child already on the premises could not recover, even though the latter child who had already entered on the land might also find a dangerous feature on the land to be enticing after entry. See Esquibel, 112 Colo. at 550, 151 P.2d at 759 (where evidence showed that the plaintiff had previously trespassed on land and had used it as a playground before the alleged attractive nuisance appeared [**23] there, she could not recover because the attractive nuisance did not entice her to enter the land); see also Garel, 163 Colo. at 112, 428 P.2d at 715; Denver Tramway Corp. v. Garcia, 154 Colo. at 423, 390 P.2d at 956; Staley, 152 Colo. at 23, 380 P.2d at 55; Hayko, 77 Colo. at 146-47, 235 P. at 374.

[*P42] These precedents rest on the rationale that the attractive nuisance itself acts as the invitation to the child to enter on the land. See Denver Tramway Corp. v. Callahan, 112 Colo. at 464-65, 150 P.2d at 799-800. The supreme court noted its approval of this concept in Lovejoy v. Denver & Rio Grande R.R. Co., 59 Colo. 222, 225-26, 146 P. 263, 264 (1915):

The leaving or maintaining of a dangerous and attractive machine, or other instrument or agency upon one’s premises, under circumstances which naturally tend to attract or allure young children of immature judgment, and to induce them to believe that they are at liberty to enter and handle or play with it, is tantamount to an implied invitation to enter. Hence a corresponding duty is imposed upon the owner or occupant of the premises to prevent the intrusion, or to protect from personal injury such children as may be so attracted and thus [**24] induced to enter, and who are incapable of appreciating the attending dangers. The doctrine is founded upon the principle that when one sets a temptation before young children under circumstances which in law is equivalent to holding out of an inducement to enter, he must use ordinary care to protect them from harm. It is but applying the general rule that when one induces or invites another upon his premises, he must use ordinary care to avoid injuring him.

[*P43] These precedents establish that [HN18] a child who is enticed to trespass on the land by an attractive nuisance is accorded the preferential treatment reserved in the law for invitees. Thus, we conclude there is no constitutional infirmity in treating such a child preferentially to one in SW’s position who is a mere licensee, and we affirm the judgment in landowner’s favor.

[*P44] Because of our conclusion, we need not address landowner’s contention that the trial court erred in construing the complaint to assert an attractive nuisance claim.

[*P45] Judgment affirmed.

JUDGE ROY concurs.

JUDGE GABRIEL specially concurs.

CONCUR BY: GABRIEL

CONCUR

JUDGE GABRIEL specially concurring.

[*P46] I agree with my colleagues that the district court correctly granted summary judgment to defendant [**25] Towers Boat Club, Inc. (the landowner) on plaintiffs’ attractive nuisance claim. I respectfully write separately, however, because unlike my colleagues, I would rule on narrower grounds and not reach any of the constitutional issues. See Developmental Pathways v. Ritter, 178 P.3d 524, 535 (Colo. 2008) (noting that the principle of judicial restraint requires courts to avoid reaching constitutional questions that need not be decided); People v. Lybarger, 700 P.2d 910, 915 (Colo. 1985) (“Axiomatic to the exercise of judicial authority is the principle that a court should not decide a constitutional issue unless and until such issue is actually raised by a party to the controversy and the necessity for such decision is clear and inescapable.”).

[*P47] Plaintiffs contend that the district court erred in holding that the attractive nuisance doctrine applies only to trespassers, because in plaintiffs’ view, it must apply equally to invitees, licensees, and trespassers. If it did not, plaintiffs say, the premises liability statute would allow the type of “inverted hierarchy” that our supreme court found unconstitutional in Gallegos v. Phipps, 779 P.2d 856, 862-63 (Colo. 1989).

[*P48] Unlike the majority, [**26] I see no reason to decide this issue, or the constitutional questions that it necessarily implicates. Assuming without deciding that plaintiffs are correct and that the attractive nuisance doctrine applies to invitees, licensees, and trespassers alike, plaintiffs’ attractive nuisance claim fails as a matter of law for another reason.

[*P49] It has long been settled in Colorado that for the attractive nuisance doctrine to apply, the attraction must have enticed the child to trespass; it is not enough if the attraction enticed the child only after he or she became a trespasser. Hayko v. Colo. & Utah Coal Co., 77 Colo. 143, 145, 235 P. 373, 375 (1925); accord Adams v. Warren Analytical Labs., Inc., No. 05-cv-01536-EWN-MEH, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 88129, 2006 WL 3512044, at *5 (D. Colo. Dec. 6, 2006); Denver Tramway Corp. v. Garcia, 154 Colo. 417, 423, 390 P.2d 952, 956 (1964). Indeed, plaintiffs concede that, even under their view of the attractive nuisance doctrine, the attraction must have enticed the child to enter the landowner’s property. Here, however, it is undisputed that the bungee run attraction did not entice SW to enter the landowner’s property. Accordingly, even if the attractive nuisance doctrine could be read [**27] to apply to invitees, licensees, and trespassers alike, as a matter of law, plaintiffs cannot prevail on their attractive nuisance claim. I would thus affirm the district court’s judgment on that narrow ground and not reach the broader and constitutional questions that plaintiffs have raised.

Enhanced by Zemanta

You cannot answer a question by filing a lawsuit.

Man suing for answers on how his wife died.

Here is the quote from the article: “Grieving husband Colin Cross is taking legal action in his quest for answers as to how his wife died in Mexico

Arch of Cabo San Lucas

Arch of Cabo San Lucas (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

earlier this month.”

A San Diego attorney suing a Mexican company for a Canadian. That set of circumstances alone will probably prevent any real resolution. On top of that, how are you going to collect from a Mexican defendant.

Finally, lawsuits don’t answer questions. Lawsuits move money around.

See Man takes legal action in wife’s Mexico scuba death

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, #scuba, scuba diving, Cabo San Lucas, fatality

WordPress Tags: lawsuit,wife,Here,article,husband,Colin,Cross,action,Mexico,Diego,attorney,Mexican,Canadian,defendant,lawsuits,money,death,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents,Cabo,Lucas,scuba

Enhanced by Zemanta

Stop Feuding, I doubt, move forward anyway, I think you can.

The Challenge/Ropes Course Industry is still fighting after all these years……it is a very sad song.

The challenge course, or as it was known in its beginning, the ropes’ course industry, is still setting itself up to be sued, successfully sued. My calculations show they have had judgments and settlements in excess of $5.1 million. See Payouts in Outdoor Recreation. Not included in those calculations are another $3.1 million that I learned of that was a settlement this past summer (2011). In 10 years, the industry has had $8.2 million in pay outs based upon my research. Who knows how much more has been paid that is confidential settlements or judgments I can’t find.

In my opinion, a major part of the problem is standards. Which is probably why they are losing these suits and why the industry is a mess?

There are two separate groups writing standards for the industry. Neither of those groups is part of the ASTM, both are trying to become ANSI standard setting organizations.

Standards for things; bolts, screws, wood, concrete are already done by the ASTM.  Those are great standards, created correctly and are needed by this industry. Those standards are always going to trump anything the ropes’ course industry does. Consequently, ignoring that is a joke. For things (anything without a personality) refer to and adopt the ASTM standards.

Any standard that recreates or redoes the standards established by the ASTM is 1) a waste of time and 2) only a way to create litigation. The ASTM standard is going to be controlling. If the standard created by an industry association is lower than the ASTM standard or even different, the standard will be violated because the ASTM will be controlling.

For any cables/wire, the European standards for ski lifts control. Those standards on wire have been around for almost 100 years and are great. Again, this is a monster waste of time and energy to create something that does not matter.

For people, get rid of those standards. People make mistakes, not concrete. If it can make a mistake, dump the standard attached to it. For more on this issue see Trade Association Standards sink a Summer Camp when a plaintiff uses them to prove Camp was negligent, Expert Witness Report: ACA “Standards” are used by Expert for the Plaintiff in a lawsuit against a Camp, and ACA “Standards” are used by Expert for the Plaintiff in a lawsuit against a Camp

Here is what the National Ski Area Association says about standards: See NSAA and standards. Understand that the lifts have standards but the ski areas do not. The NSAA is like 99% of the rest of the trade associations in the world; they know that writing standards is a legal nightmare.

What you should do.

If you are part of the ropes’ course industry, you need to protect yourself from the problems created by these dual standards. Get both sets of standards and create reasons why you are not following specific ones. That way in advance, you protect yourself. Be specific, not just it does not apply and do not use the word money or cost unless you can show a better way that may be cheaper.

Resolution of the issues for the Standards

There are several options on how to resolve the problem.

1.     One group can get to the ANSI, finish up and have “standards.” However, this will only work if the other group, then drops its standards. One group has indicated they will not. Can you think of this getting any worse that would occur?

2.     Eliminate both sets of “standards” and start gain from scratch. Go to the ASTM and set up a committee to set up standards and adopt all the ASTM ones that are done. What is left can be written at that point. I suspect that will be a short piece of paper.

I believe this alternative has the best legal benefits.

3.     Find six people who are not vested in winning. It is too small of a job for anything less, and I don’t think you can find eight impartial people with respect to the groups.  They should go through each standard and write down the best one and move on. I would give them standards that are not identified as to who created which ones. All they are working with is words on paper, not logos or IDs.

If you want to see where standards can go too far read this article:  Playgrounds will be flat soon. No city can meet the playground standards with the current budgets they have to work with.

Do Something

If you are part of this industry, good luck. There are a lot of great people in the industry; however,  a lot of them have drunk the cool-aid from one group or another and cannot see past their respective “turf.”

Until the standards for operations are gone and there is only one set of standards for the industry, it will be a plaintiff’s playground.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

Copyright 2011 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law, Recreation.Law@Gmail.com

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #ASTM, #ANSI, #PRCA, #ACCT, #Standards, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse,

WordPress Tags: Stop,Challenge,Ropes,Course,Industry,song,calculations,judgments,settlements,million,Payouts,Outdoor,Recreation,settlement,opinion,Neither,ASTM,ANSI,Standards,wood,litigation,association,European,Again,energy,People,Trade,Summer,Camp,plaintiff,Expert,Report,lawsuit,Here,National,Area,NSAA,Understand,areas,money,cost,Resolution,options,Eliminate,committee,paper,Find,logos,article,Playgrounds,playground,luck,Leave,Edit,Gmail,Twitter,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Camps,Youth,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,PRCA,ACCT,ones

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Expert Witness Reports. Got one?

New ideas and service

I know talking about old lawsuits is a thrill, but I’m trying to track down some information. I’m trying to locate expert witness reports used in litigation against camps and other outdoor recreation businesses.  Reports used by the plaintiffs are my first priority but defendant expert reports are also of interest.

I have two reasons for doing this. The first is to track down different times when experts are being used who have been trained by the organization that the defendants are members of. Several OR member organizations have been training for their members. I doubt their intention is to train people who are then being hired as experts to sue their membership. However, it is happening.

This is sort of delicate (well as delicate as I can ever be). I don’t want to tear down any organization. I believe the OR organizations great that have done a lot of good and will continue to do so. At the same time, the standards issues need to be brought to light. The only way of doing that will be to show times when the organization information has been used to sue is members.

The other thing I am going to do is to scan the reports and keep them available.  It is always great to have former expert’s reports to refer to see if they have made a statement in a prior report that contradicts their statement or opinion in the latest report.  It’s something I’ve been doing for years for the rafting and mountaineering industry.

If you are interested and can email me an electronic copy of any  report you have or send me a copy. I would appreciate it.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, expert witness, #expert, expert witness report, expert report, #ACA, American Camping Association, #CWA, Climbing Wall Association, #AEE, Association of Experiential Education.

WordPress Tags: Expert,Reports,lawsuits,information,litigation,recreation,plaintiffs,defendant,experts,defendants,Several,member,intention,membership,statement,opinion,industry,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents,American,Association,Wall,Experiential,Education

Enhanced by Zemanta

Client dies, be banned from your occupation for five years.

Once you leave the US, you are no longer protected by US laws.

Two ski instructors are facing a five year ban from skiing and a fine for the death of a client in an Avalanche. The ski instructors had taken the client into a known danger zone where the client was caught and died.

See Prosecutor wants 5 year ban for ESF instructors

Dombai, general view of skiing routes from the...

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, skiing, ski instructor, Europe, Criminal,

 

WordPress Tags: Client,occupation,Once,laws,instructors,death,Avalanche,danger,Prosecutor,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents,instructor,Europe,Criminal,five

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Architects, Engineers and Recreation, we need the first two, to be successful in the second

No, not to tear down the wilderness, I’m talking about what we build.

In the recreation industry, we build a lot of things that our customers use: Ropes courses, zip lines, climbing walls, raft frames, etc. I see a lot of these being built by owners or by contractors who are not the correctly licensed people for the jobs. If you have clients interacting with something, you built; you better have an engineer/architect approve the plans and the construction. You also may need to have the plans approved the structure approved by the appropriate city, county, or state licensing authority.

Additionally, you may be violating city, county or state laws if the work is not approved in advance by an architect or engineer and or built by a “licensed” person/contractor.

This is hard to write because the laws are usually local in nature, so there is no uniform way to look at the issues. In the general, I’ll use the term state to mean any government entity, city, county, municipal, tax district, state or federal agency.

It does not matter what letters or made-up name is behind a person’s name when they tell you they can build your wall/course/building. Each state law requires the person who approves it be licensed by the state to plan and make sure the works is done correctly. The actual builder can be anyone in most cases, although this varies by state law. But somewhere in the process a city, county or state requires the plans be created or approved by a licensed engineer or architect.

You may also have to make sure that the city; county or state code is met and approved as well as fire code.

Why pay the extra money? Because if something goes wrong, only that license can prove you are not intentional injuring people. Here is why.

·        The architect or engineer is going to be local; you can find him to have him or her testify on your behalf. You won’t be calling a number that is not being answered in another state.

·        The license is going to give you the first defense, rather than a liability.

·        If the licensed person did screw up, they have insurance to cover you rather than a general liability policy which has holes the insurance company can use to exit the lawsuit with its money in its pocket.

·        There is probably a law or regulation that requires it. If you violate this law and do not have the plans or construction approved by the appropriate people you are negligent per se. As such, you may not have a defense to the claim, including the release you use.

·        The licensed local person is going to know the laws and regulations you must meet. You should not have a government inspector show up later and close you down.

It might be a problem if you are first climbing wall/gym/ropes course the licensing bureau has ever seen. You may need to bring photographs, videos and other examples to show what you are doing.

You may also have to do the same if you are hiring a licensed contractor to explain to them what you are trying to accomplish.

Either way, in the long run, it is the only legal way to go.

It is better than jail time, by the way. Yes, if you have not correctly licensed your structure, you could be facing zoning issues and violation of other laws, which could result in fines. In this example, the owner of this tree house ended up in court. See Golden takes aim at elaborate treehouseor Fight over Golden tree house set to go to court.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

Copyright 2010 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law, Recreation.Law@Gmail.com

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog: http://www.recreation-law.com

#recreationlaw, #@recreationlaw, #cycling.law #fitness.law, #ski.law, #outside.law, #recreation.law, #recreation-law.com, #outdoor law, #recreation law, #outdoor recreation law, #adventure travel law, #law, #travel law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #attorney at law, #tourism, #adventure tourism, #rec-law, #rec-law blog, #recreation law, #recreation law blog, #risk management, #Human Powered, #human powered recreation,# cycling law, #bicycling law, #fitness law, #recreation-law.com, #backpacking, #hiking, #Mountaineering, #ice climbing, #rock climbing, #ropes course, #challenge course, #summer camp, #camps, #youth camps, #skiing, #ski areas, #negligence, #licensed, #contractor, #ropescourse, ropes course, #challengecourse, challenge course, climbing wall, #treehouse,

WordPress Tags: Architects,Engineers,Recreation,industry,customers,Ropes,owners,contractors,jobs,clients,architect,construction,laws,person,contractor,government,district,agency,builder,money,Here,insurance,policy,lawsuit,regulation,inspector,bureau,examples,Either,violation,example,owner,tree,Golden,Leave,Edit,Gmail,Twitter,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Keywords,Moss,James,attorney,tourism,management,Human,youth,areas,negligence,treehouse

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Apologizing, we need to do more, understand it and accept more for what it is

This should be our national mantra.

clip_image001

It is part of being a human being, or at least should be.

Facebook can be helpful…..sometimes

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, apologize, apologies,

WordPress Tags: mantra,Facebook,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents,apologies


So will this kill the rental market or just prove that life happens

Landowner, who rented cottage to married couple sued for death, when groom drowns in landowner kayak

According to the article, the landowner rented her cottage to a couple on their honeymoon. On the last day of their stay the deceased took a kayak out on the ocean that was at the cottage. The deceased was wearing a PFD (life jacket).

He was found dead floating in the bay with his PFD on after the weather changed.

So anticipating a lawsuit, the landowner filed a notice of claim under Admiralty law. Admiralty law says the claim of the injured (or deceased) is limited to the value of the vessel after the accident. In her filing she states she paid indicates she purchased the vessel, manufactured by Ocean Kayak, in May 2009 for $297 for the kayak three years ago.

If the federal district court accepts the notice, then the lawsuit is effectively ended and the plaintiff’s will receive $297.

two Ocean Kayak sit-on-tops for two paddlers each.

two Ocean Kayak sit-on-tops for two paddlers each. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

It is a great move in anticipation of litigation.

However

It is stupid that a person who is renting out their cottage on the ocean has to do this. What was the negligent act that she did? The kayak was still good, it was found floating, there was a PFD for the victim and he was wearing it. What else could you be liable for?

A property owner, landowner, has a duty of care to keep the property reasonably safe and to inform guests or invitees of any dangers. The deceased left the property!

See Kayak owner may face lawsuit over groom’s death or Property owner seeks liability protection in case of kayaker’s death.

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, #kayak, #PFD, Sit on top, cottage, rental property,

WordPress Tags: rental,life,Landowner,cottage,death,article,jacket,lawsuit,vessel,accident,Ocean,Kayak,district,plaintiff,anticipation,litigation,person,victim,owner,guests,dangers,protection,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,helmet,accidents

Enhanced by Zemanta

Aspen adding $100K to its budget for the USA Pro Challenge

Great for Aspen and Pitkin County

Hotel Jerome, Aspen, CO, USA

Hotel Jerome, Aspen, CO, USA (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This article is interesting in that it explains how pro-cycling works in the US. The cities involved in the USA Pro Challenge pay to have the race come to their town.

The article shows where the money is coming from and why and how much is being contributed by government and how much is being raised by the community.

This article is also interesting because Aspen reported that it lost money on the 2011 USA Pro Challenge when it came to town. See $83.5 million brought to Colorado by the USA Pro Challenge!

See Aspen’s Pro Cycling budget increases by $100K

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or LinkedIn

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

Mobile Site: http://m.recreation-law.com

Colombian cyclist Rafel Infantino, in the 2011...

Colombian cyclist Rafel Infantino, in the 2011 USA Pro Cycling Challenge Español: Ciclista colombiano Rafael Infantino, durante el USA Pro Cycling Challenge 2011 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, USA Pro Challenge, Bicycle Racing, Cycle Racing, #Aspen, #Pitkin, Pitkin County

 

WordPress Tags: Aspen,Challenge,Great,Pitkin,article,cities,money,government,million,Colorado,Leave,Twitter,LinkedIn,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Mobile,Site,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,managers,helmet,accidents,Bicycle,Cycle

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

2011-2012 Ski Season Skier/Boarder Fatalities

This list is not guaranteed to be accurate. The information is found from web searches and news dispatches. If you have a source for information on any fatality please leave a comment.

Several Corrections have been made to items reported earlier.

If this information is incorrect or incomplete please let me know.  This is up to date as of April 15, 2012. Thanks.

#

Date

Resort

Age

Skier Ability

Ski/ Tele /Boarder

Helmet

Reference

1

11/18/2011

Vail

62

Skier

Yes

http://rec-law.us/rBcn7A

2

11/18/2011

Breckenridge

19

Expert

Boarder

Yes

http://rec-law.us/rBcn7A

3

11/27/2011

Mountain High ski resort

23

Beginner

Boarder

Yes

http://rec-law.us/uGuW17

4

12/18/2011

Sugar Bowl ski resort

7

Expert

Skier

http://rec-law.us/viAqCR

1/4/2012

Medical

http://rec-law.us/y3sOtx

5

1/11/2012

Ski Apache

29

Skier

No

http://rec-law.us/zdfQ4k

6

1/12/2012

Sugarloaf ski resort

41

Skier

Yes

http://rec-law.us/yNHkuc

7

1/14/2012

Silverton Mountain Ski Area

25

Expert

Skier

http://rec-law.us/zcw6MB

8

1/17/2012

Heavenly Mountain Resort

34

Boarder

Yes

http://rec-law.us/yRAXXc

9

1/18/2012

Aspen Highlands

30

Boarder

Yes

http://rec-law.us/wv7vDs

10

1/18/2012

Mt. Hood Meadows Ski Resort

15

Boarder

No

http://rec-law.us/AAnq46

11

1/19/2012

Park City

29

Boarder

Yes

http://rec-law.us/w0k4Pe

12

1/20/2012

Copper Mountain

51

Yes

http://rec-law.us/wD06TR

13

1/20/2012

Whiteface Mountain

25

Yes

http://rec-law.us/wDkcfl

14

1/21/2012

Vail

13

Expert

Skier

http://rec-law.us/xdhVcp

15

1/22/2012

Winter Park

28

Expert

Skier

http://rec-law.us/A0bbt

16

1/24/2012

Steamboat Ski Area

32

Boarder

http://rec-law.us/wF9UFc

17

1/24/2012

Taos Ski Valley

60

Skier

http://rec-law.us/wUl1Vz

18

1/25/2012

Keystone Ski Area

54

Skier

http://rec-law.us/AihrSt

19

1/27/2012

Mt. Hood Skibowl

17

Boarder

http://rec-law.us/zzD3KB

1/29/2012

Medical

19

http://rec-law.us/wcPB7k

20

1/30/2012

Seven Springs Mountain Resort

36

Skier

http://rec-law.us/yOwgDg

21

1/31/2012

Solitude Ski Resort

74

Skier

No

http://rec-law.us/w68s4A

22

2/1/2012

Squaw Valley

51

Skier

http://rec-law.us/xqDrGE

23

2/4/2012

Sugarbush Resort

41

Skier

Yes

http://rec-law.us/zTDKPK

24

2/4/2012

Ski Windham Mountain Resor

54

Skier

http://rec-law.us/ySA8W4

25

2/5/2012

Keystone Ski Area

58

Skier

No

http://rec-law.us/wH6QJA

26

2/5/2012

Ski Windham Mountain Resort

54

Skier

http://rec-law.us/zcTZpF

27

2/6/2012

Mount Snow

33

http://rec-law.us/ABqYPQ

28

2/8/2012

Vail

37

Yes

http://rec-law.us/zF4Ck2

29

2/9/2012

Keystone Ski Area

72

Yes

http://rec-law.us/A9YwUD

30

2/11/2012

Jay Peak Resort

29

Boarder

Yes

http://rec-law.us/x3rzek

31

2/11/2012

Terry Peak Ski Area

24

Skier

No

http://rec-law.us/A0BvQq

32

2/11/2012

Terry Peak Ski Area

24

Skier

No

http://rec-law.us/A0BvQq

33

2/18/2012

Sun Valley

34

2/19/2012

Copper Mountain

15

Boarder

Yes

http://rec-law.us/xHsBHH

35

2/26/2012

Keystone Ski Area

24

Yes

http://rec-law.us/y4CANi

36

2/23/2012

Northstar California

52

Yes

http://rec-law.us/zgqcTZ

37

3/1/2012

Burke Mountain Ski Resort

70

Yes

http://rec-law.us/xOjOY7

38

3/8/2012

Copper Mountain

18

Skier

Yes

http://rec-law.us/xotYaO

39

3/9/2012

Keystone Ski Area

23

Skier

No

http://rec-law.us/xJ2THl

40

3/10/2012

Terry Peak Ski Area

54

Skier

http://rec-law.us/ADkQWq

41

3/10/2012

Loveland Ski Area

71

Skier

No

http://rec-law.us/Ajhcko

42

3/14/2012

Crested Butte Mountain Resort

36

Skier

No

http://rec-law.us/w3lbdr

43

3/16/2012

Northstar California

51

Skier

Yes

http://rec-law.us/FQM5hK

44

3/18/2012

China Peak Ski Resort

30

Boarder

http://rec-law.us/FQ2kwq

45

3/18/2012

Sierra-at-Tahoe

54

Skier

http://rec-law.us/FVYq4q

46

3/19/2012

Sugar Bowl Ski Resort

20

Boarder

http://rec-law.us/GAucKe

47

3/21/2012

Mt. Hood Skibowl recreational area

38

Yes

http://rec-law.us/GOnK3g

48

3/24/2012

Wold Creek Ski Area

19

No

http://rec-law.us/GP0RXB

3/23/2012

Medical

Yes

http://rec-law.us/H7nGFL

49

3/28/2012

Skibowl

37

Yes

http://rec-law.us/GO4xMx

50

3/31/2012

White Pass Ski Area

22

http://rec-law.us/H3

What do you think? Leave a comment.

If you like this let your friends know or post it on FB, Twitter or Linkedin

Copyright 2012 Recreation Law (720) Edit Law

blog@rec-law.us

Twitter: RecreationLaw

Facebook: Rec.Law.Now

Facebook Page: Outdoor Recreation & Adventure Travel Law

Blog:www.recreation-law.com

#RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #Ski.Law, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Outdoor Law, #Recreation Law, #Outdoor Recreation Law, #Adventure Travel Law, #law, #Travel Law, #Jim Moss, #James H. Moss, #Attorney at Law, #Tourism, #Adventure Tourism, #Rec-Law, #Rec-Law Blog, #Recreation Law, #Recreation Law Blog, #Risk Management, #Human Powered, #Human Powered Recreation,# Cycling Law, #Bicycling Law, #Fitness Law, #Recreation-Law.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #Ice Climbing, #Rock Climbing, #Ropes Course, #Challenge Course, #Summer Camp, #Camps, #Youth Camps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, #RecreationLaw, #@RecreationLaw, #Cycling.Law #Fitness.Law, #SkiLaw, #Outside.Law, #Recreation.Law, #RecreationLaw.com, #OutdoorLaw, #RecreationLaw, #OutdoorRecreationLaw, #AdventureTravelLaw, #Law, #TravelLaw, #JimMoss, #JamesHMoss, #AttorneyatLaw, #Tourism, #AdventureTourism, #RecLaw, #RecLawBlog, #RecreationLawBlog, #RiskManagement, #HumanPowered, #HumanPoweredRecreation,# CyclingLaw, #BicyclingLaw, #FitnessLaw, #RecreationLaw.com, #Backpacking, #Hiking, #Mountaineering, #IceClimbing, #RockClimbing, #RopesCourse, #ChallengeCourse, #SummerCamp, #Camps, #YouthCamps, #Skiing, #Ski Areas, #Negligence, #Snowboarding, sport and recreation laws, ski law, cycling law, Colorado law, law for recreation and sport managers, bicycling and the law, cycling and the law, ski helmet law, skiers code, skiing accidents, #Vail, #Breckenridge, #Mountain High Ski Resort, #Ski Ward, #Sugarloaf, #Silverton, Ski Apache, #Sugarloaft, #Heavenly, #Aspen, Mt Hood, Park City, #Copper, #Whiteface, Winter Park, #Steamboat, #Taos, #Keystone, #Canyons, Seven Springs, #Solitude, Ski Windham, Mount Snow, Jay Peak Terry Peak,

WordPress Tags: Skier,Boarder,Fatalities,Season,information,news,Several,Corrections,items,April,Thanks,Date,Resort,Tele,Helmet,Reference,Vail,Breckenridge,Expert,Mountain,High,Beginner,Sugar,Bowl,Medical,Apache,Sugarloaf,Silverton,Area,Aspen,Highlands,Meadows,Park,Copper,Whiteface,Winter,Steamboat,Taos,Valley,AihrSt,Skibowl,Seven,Springs,Solitude,Squaw,Sugarbush,Windham,Resor,Mount,ABqYPQ,Peak,Terry,Northstar,California,Burke,ADkQWq,Loveland,Ajhcko,Butte,China,Sierra,Tahoe,GAucKe,Wold,Creek,White,Pass,Leave,Twitter,Linkedin,Recreation,Edit,RecreationLaw,Facebook,Page,Outdoor,Adventure,Travel,Blog,Outside,Moss,James,Attorney,Tourism,Risk,Management,Human,Rock,Ropes,Course,Challenge,Summer,Camp,Camps,Youth,Areas,Negligence,SkiLaw,OutdoorLaw,OutdoorRecreationLaw,AdventureTravelLaw,TravelLaw,JimMoss,JamesHMoss,AttorneyatLaw,AdventureTourism,RecLaw,RecLawBlog,RecreationLawBlog,RiskManagement,HumanPoweredRecreation,CyclingLaw,BicyclingLaw,FitnessLaw,RopesCourse,ChallengeCourse,SummerCamp,YouthCamps,Colorado,managers,accidents,Ward,Sugarloaft,Canyons

 

Enhanced by Zemanta