Thursday, February 24, 2011

Worker’s compensation is not enough, but then stupid is as stupid does.

Reporter suing for injuries she received while reporting about a Zorb at a ski area. 

A Zorb is a giant ball that rolls down the hill. The reporter was at Lost Valley ski area when she tried the Zorb for a story. The basis of the suit is the ski area said the Zorb was reasonable safe. Supposedly, the Zorb left the course and rolled over a barrier. Her complaint goes on to say. The ski area…
"failed to undertake basic and reasonable safety precautions, follow industry guidelines, seek governmental approval and/or use reasonable common sense in researching, acquiring, installing, testing and/or offering 'zorbing' at" the ski area.

Of course every business should immediately go out and ask the government, state local and federal, for approval for everything they may do. My favorite, they ski industry failed to follow industry guidelines. What industry, there is one company make Zorb’s.
After the wild ride, she drove back to the newspaper office then was taken to Central Maine Medical Center in Lewiston where she was later admitted.

At the same time, this suit may not be connected to the reporter’s desire for compensation. This may be due to one of two different things.

1. Worker’s compensation in Maine maybe so bad that the woman needs additional money to pay her medical bills; or,

2. The suit is based on the subrogation clause in the worker’s compensation policy and is actually started by the insurance company. The suit is in the woman’s name because she has the claim, but most of the money will go to the insurance company.

I hope a release was signed.

Before climbing in, you can’t figure out the risk? I’m getting into a plastic ball to roll down the hill in front of me, and I’m not worried!

What do you think? Leave a comment.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

You never know what really happened or what was really said, but still……

Letter to the editor about a boarder v. skier collision at Copper Mountain Ski area creates more questions than answers..

Al Thomas wrote a letter to the editor of the Summit Daily. The Summit Daily is the local newspaper for Summit County where Copper Mountain, Keystone, Breckenridge and Arapahoe Basin are located. Skiing/boarding is big in that county. Al wrote about the issues and injuries he received when he was hit by a snowboarder while skiing at Copper Mountain. He appears to be as mad at Copper Mountain as the Snowboarder.

Mr. Thomas had stopped at a slow sign to wait on a friend when he was hit by a snowboarder. He says 10 people witnessed the accident. This paragraph is the confusing part of the letter.
A requested ski incident report was furnished to me by Copper Mountain. I met with Charles Payne “Risk and Safety.” I asked if the other party had been cited. Mr. Payne explained that unless a Copper employee was an actual eye witness to an event, it was Copper's policy not to issue any citations. In my case the other party admitted to skiing in excess of 10 mph in a slow-ski zone and to having at least one alcoholic beverage before the incident. I wonder if this person was impaired.

First of all, Copper Mountain cannot issue a citation, ticket to anyone. Only law enforcement, in this case the Summit County Sheriff can do that. However, Copper Mountain can turn the information over to law enforcement for them to make the decision if the events rise to the level of a criminal act. If ten people watched the accident, that is a lot of witness statements. Additionally, the snowboarder admitted skiing too fast.

The statement “unless a Copper employee was an actual eye witness to an event”, if true is confusing. It is not Copper’s responsibility, and I seriously doubt Copper is only going to do something if an employee witnesses an event.

The Colorado Skier Safety Act specifically allows lawsuits between people who have collided on the slopes. (Contrary to California which says collisions are a risk of skiing.)
C.R.S. 33-44-109(1) Each skier solely has the responsibility for knowing the range of his own ability to negotiate any ski slope or trail and to ski within the limits of such ability. Each skier expressly accepts and assumes the risk of and all legal responsibility for any injury to person or property resulting from any of the inherent dangers and risks of skiing; except that a skier is not precluded under this article from suing another skier for any injury to person or property resulting from such other skier's acts or omissions. Notwithstanding any provision of law or statute to the contrary, the risk of a skier/skier collision is neither an inherent risk nor a risk assumed by a skier in an action by one skier against another.

The statute specifically protects the ski area and places any liability on other people on the slope.
A ski area may revoke a skier’s skiing (and boarding) privileges in a careless and reckless manner.
C.R.S. 33-44-108(5) The ski area operator, upon finding a person skiing in a careless and reckless manner, may revoke that person's skiing privileges. This subsection (5) shall not be construed to create an affirmative duty on the part of the ski area operator to protect skiers from their own or from another skier's carelessness or recklessness.

In this case Copper Mountain could have removed the boarder who caused the collision from the slopes and taken any ski pass, daily or seasonal from him or her. That is the extent of what a Ski Area in Colorado may do. That usually can be done by any employee, definitely by the ski patrol and management and easy to do with the severity of the injuries and ten witnesses.

Whether or not criminal charges should have been pressed against the snowboarder is totally out of the control of the ski area. Copper Mountain’s ability to do anything ends with the confiscation of the ski pass.
See Al Thomas: Ski area need better safety enforcement.

What do you think? Leave a comment.
 

Friday, February 18, 2011

Law to make Snowboarding official sport of Vermont

It’s nice to know that some states have everything under control and don’t have anything else to do. Besides, they only snowboard there; there is no skiing, tele, backcountry, or rondenee!

See Legislation to make snowboarding Vermont's official sport

Now I understand the issues of motivating students; in this case, 6th graders who came up with the idea. They had been researching issues and found that Vermont did not have an official state sport. However, in some cases, you can make more people madder than happy with this issue.

Besides, what happened to suing resorts? Vermont has been the first and continues to be one of the leaders in this “sport!”

What do you think? Leave a comment.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Local arrested for not leaving ski area when asked.

This is being reported as a skiing uphill issue. It’s probably not now. 

Jackson Hole local Roland Fleck was arrested February 5, 2011. He had skied uphill and was told not to by the ski patrol. After a 3.5 hour confrontation with the ski patrol and local deputies, he was arrested. During those 3.5 hours, he was even offered a free lift ticket.

This is not a case of the ski patrol stopping someone from skiing uphill. Although I have no problem with a ski area stopping uphill skiers or downhill skiers, for that matter, this case does not seem to end with that issue.. This is a case where someone decides to pick a fight. I’ve never known law enforcement or anyone to spend 3.5 hours talking to someone before arresting them. 3.5 minutes would be a world record before you are on the ground and cuffed.

The ski area has the right to control who has access to the land. The land owner is the US Forest Service which manages the land for the US. (The land is not owned by the people of the US.) The land has been “leased” to the ski area for the purpose of a ski area. The Ski area pays the US Forest Service for the right to run the ski area. The ski area has control over that land subject to the US Forest Service agreement.

Compare it to a landlord tenant situation. The landlord owns the building. The tenant pays the landlord for the right, as set out in the lease, to the building. Under the lease, the tenant has 100% control over the building and can allow someone in or throw them out at the tenant’s will. This may even allow them to allow or deny access to the landowner. It is dependent upon the lease. It does not matter who owns the land when it is leased.
Either the ski area has the right to do what it wants, as allowed in the lease or not. We may be the eventual owners of the land, but we have given up that right to access the land because it is managed for us by the Federal Government through the USFS which leased the land to Jackson Hole Mountain Resort.

Look at it this way. If the defendant was hurt on the land while using the resort who would he sue? Us? no. The US Forest Service? No. He would sue the ski area. Because of that, the ski area should have the right to protect itself and protect the people it has charged to access the land.

See 7 patrollers, 2 deputies spend 3 hours trying to stop, cuff and toboggan Fleck off mountain.

What do you think? Leave a comment.
 

Thursday, February 3, 2011