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Legally, I doubt that the title matters much. Even as "trip
coordinator" you will have acquired certain duties, but as long as you are within the realm of "reasonable and prudent", the liability just isn't an issue. The real reason that liability isn't much of a concern is that most clubs and very few members have deep enough pockets to make lawsuits very attractive. In some sense, the availablity of liability insurance on a club trip probably increases the likelyhood of being sued, although I still can't find a case of a paddling club being sued by a member or participate. To respond to Brian. 1. I've had pretty good luck on the whitewater side. Most of the instructors are very competent and pretty good teachers. I'm only certified in SWR, and while I sometimes disagree with subject matter and teach methods with some instructors, I have a lot of respect for the ability of every ACA SWR instructor I've met. We went through something similar to what your club experienced in another club I paddle with on occasion. A group concerned with liability decided that we needed to "Certify" trip leaders. Unfortunately, the people that proposed this rule weren't leading trips and those of us that did were often not local to the main body of the club and didn't really feel like driving 4 hours to take a seminar to teach us something we had been doing for years, especially since it was being taught in many cases by people that had little experience leading trips. I refused to take the seminar for years, I'm a certified SWR instructor, if that ain't good enough then I just won't lead any trips. I've tried to get that changed for a number of years, but with no success so far. Nowdays I paddle mainly with a highly disorganized but fun club. Larry On Oct 31, 9:51*am, "Oci-One Kanubi" wrote: Several of the clubs I'm affiliated with have shelved the concept of "trip leader". *They are now called "trip coordinators" and their formal responsibility ends when (1) the trip has been publicized in such a way that any member who takes the trouble can learn about it, (2) a rendezvous place and time has been established, and (3) the shuttle has been organized and run. When I organize a trip, after discharging these responsibilities, I ask if anyone wants to volunteer to be probe boat and if two people will volunteer to be sweep team (I don't organize trips on rivers where I am not willing to be either probe or sweep, so the worst case is that I probe and the rest straggle randomly behind). *Then I gather the group together, count boats, ANNOUNCE THE COUNT so that everyone (this is my story if I ever have to tell it to a jury) shares the responsibility for keeping count of the participants, and briefly go over the simple paddle- and whistle-signals, make sure everyone knows who the probe and sweeps are, and tell them that if they fail to keep between the probe and sweeps they cannot expect any help from the group. *Sometimes, if it is a large group and includes paddlers whose skill-level I don't know, I will ask everyone to pair off into buddy-teams so that if the count ever comes up short everyone can check for his buddy's presence, and we will quickly know who is missing, so that we can then get on to "who saw him last, and where?" *Then, I count boats all-too-frequently all the way down the river. *But I do all this in the capacity of officious busybody, not as "trip leader". -Richard, His Kanubic Travesty -- ================================================== ==================== Richard Hopley * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *Winston-Salem, NC, USA . * * * * * * * * * *rhopley[at]earthlink[dot]net . * * Nothing really matters except Boats, Sex, and Rock'n'Roll . * * * * * * * * * * rhopley[at]wfubmc[dot]edu . OK, OK; computer programming for scientific research also matters Brian Nystrom wrote: wrote: Brian Nystrom wrote [...] Most of the other clubs in our area have eschewed membership in the ACA PAC program and just go it alone. They rely on the principles of the "Common Adventure Model" for liability protection. To date AFAIK, none of the clubs or their members have been sued for anything that has happened at any of their club functions, trips, etc., primarily because their safety record is exemplary, as is ours. With the cost of insurance going through the roof, I suspect that CAM is the wave of the future. The question of insurance is the major issue. Our current club officers are very nervous about going to a waver scheme -- feeling that they would not provide any reliable protection for the club or the paddle leaders. The issue is how your trips are structured. If you have defined leaders, they will have increased liability. If your trips are "let's get together and paddle" affairs with no formal structure, they fall under the auspices of the CAM. As for your club officers, depending on how many there are and how many members you have, it may be cheaper to just buy a personal liability policy for each officer than to pay for ACA insurance. I don't know if paddling is any more hazardous than playing baseball. What do baseball clubs use? I don't know. I assume that they must have some form of insurance, but being a more mainstream activity, there are probably several sources for it, unlike with kayaking.- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text - |
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