As my wife pointed out, this would seem to absolve the Village of any responsibility if the pool staff were to fill the deep end with rebar and then drive a herd of toddlers off the High Dive. Can this possibly be correct?
Klinker said:
As my wife pointed out, this would seem to absolve the Village of any responsibility if the pool staff were to fill the deep end with rebar and then drive a herd of toddlers off the High Dive. Can this possibly be correct?
No. There's no high dive any more.
Carry on.
mrincredible said:
No. There's no high dive any more.
Carry on.
When and why did that happen?
between the 2017 and 2018 pool seasons the high dive had to be removed. I think it was becoming structurally unsound.
The high dive had been grandfathered And exempt from current safety regulations ... now they can't put a high dive back where that one was. So now there's just the regular diving board.
I love having the $30 pool badge but I would pay more for some capital improvements.
i have heard that these waivers are not enforceable when the injury/illness is due to negligence of the facility/staff....they are only enforceable for actual accidents that happened despite the facility being properly maintained and the staff doing their jobs appropriately ...
a lot of places have these waivers, yet get successfully sued
jmitw said:
i have heard that these waivers are not enforceable when the injury/illness is due to negligence of the facility/staff....they are only enforceable for actual accidents that happened despite the facility being properly maintained and the staff doing their jobs appropriately ...
a lot of places have these waivers, yet get successfully sued
This is absolutely true in regards to waivers signed when participating in equestrian activities, so I would expect the liability law to be the same for other public facilities.
We signed up for our pool cards a couple of days ago and I noticed today that we needed to sign the following waiver. The scope of the rights for redress that we are surrendering seems, to me, to be a bit concerning.