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Text
Bill Text
Bill Information
Bill Start
|
Amended
IN
Senate
April 16, 2013 |
|
Amended
IN
Senate
April 04, 2013 |
| Senate Bill | No. 564 |
| Introduced by
Senator
Monning |
February 22, 2013 |
LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
This bill would require ski resorts, as defined, to prepare an annual safety plan, as defined, that includes, at a minimum, a detailed description of any and only those policies, procedures, standards, methods, and materials consistently employed to reduce patron deaths and injuries on the resort, as provided, among other things. The bill would require the safety plan to be posted on the ski resorts Internet Web site, if any, and at a location in the ski resort. The bill would require the ski resort to create monthly and annual reports that include information of all known deaths and injuries of patrons of the resort, as provided. The bill would require the ski resort to make
copies of the safety plan and reports available upon request. The bill would authorize a requesting individual to initiate a civil cause of action to compel the production of the safety plan or reports if a resort fails to make them available upon request.
Digest Key
Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NO Local Program: NOBill Text
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
SECTION 1.
Article 3 (commencing with Section 115815) is added to Chapter 4 of Part 10 of Division 104 of the Health and Safety Code, to read:Article 3. Ski Resorts
115815.
A ski resort that operates in California shall do all of the following:For the purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:
(a)“Safety plan” or “plan” refers to a document describing a plan or program to prevent accidents and reduce the number of deaths as well as the frequency and severity of injuries that generally conforms to the structure and content of model safety plans and programs recommended by property and casualty insurance companies in the United States.
(b)“Season” refers to the entire period of snow sport operations from a resort’s opening in the fall or early winter of one calendar year to its closure in the spring or early summer of the subsequent calendar
year.
(c)“Ski resort” or “resort” means any ski and other snow sport facility or resort that operates in California.
(d)“Skier day” refers to a ski industry term used to denote utilization of a snow sport resort by a guest who skis or engages in other snow sports during a single calendar day of resort operations. The number of skier days are used to track utilization as well as to normalize other patron volume related statistics over a defined period of resort operations.
(e)“Terrain park” refers to a designated area within a resort specifically groomed for jumping and other acrobatics.
A ski resort shall prepare an annual safety
plan. The safety plan shall, at a minimum, include the following:
(a)A detailed description of any and only those policies, procedures, practices, standards, methods, and materials consistently employed to reduce patron deaths and injuries on the resort lifts, slopes, trails, and terrain parks.
(b)A detailed explanation of all criteria used for designating terrain or trail difficulty.
(a)The ski resort shall post its annual safety plan on its Internet Web site, if one is maintained, and at a location in the ski resort where it can be viewed by the public.
(b)The ski resort shall make copies of its annual safety plan available in a prompt and timely manner to any person who requests it at the ski resort during its regular hours of operation, and, if the resort does not have an Internet Web site,
mail or e-mail copies of the plan within three business days of a request by telephone, Internet, or mail. The resort may charge for any postage and a per-page copying fee, not to exceed the usual and customary charge of public libraries in the area of the resort.
(a)(1)By the 15th calendar day after the end of each full or partial calendar month of snow sport operations, the resort shall create a summary monthly report of the number of all deaths that occur onsite, or subsequent to an accident that occurred onsite or after voluntary or unintended egress from the resort boundaries, and all injuries to any person that occurred onsite about which the resort is aware, unless the injury does not require medical service other than ordinary first aid onsite. The summary report shall specify the number of injured patrons using air or ground ambulance transportation from the resort to a medical facility. The summary report shall include, individual incident reports of deaths
and injuries, including all the accident and injury-related information collected by the resort, with the identity of the victim redacted.
(2)The summary monthly report shall also include the number of skier days for the month, the number of days of operation, and the approximate relative percentage of open slopes and trails by the terrain difficulty designations used by the resort as well as the criteria for those designations.
(b)Within 60 calendar days of the end of the calendar year or of its operation for a season, whichever day is later, the resort shall annually prepare a summary seasonal report consolidating and including all of the information from the reports required pursuant to subdivision (a).
(c)(1)The resort shall make copies of the reports required pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b) available in a prompt and timely manner to any person who requests them at the resort during its regular hours of operation and mail or e-mail copies of the reports within three business days of a request by telephone, Internet, or mail. The resort may charge for any postage and a per page copying fee not to exceed the usual and customary charge of public libraries in the area of the resort.
(2)This subdivision does not require a resort to publicly post the reports required pursuant to subdivisions (a) or (b) on its Internet Web site or anywhere on its premise.
If a resort fails to comply with a request made pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 115817 or subdivision (c) of Section 115818, the requesting individual may use that failure as the basis to initiate a civil cause of action to compel the production of the requested information. If the individual prevails in a civil action to compel the production of these reports or documents, the resort shall pay the cost of the individual’s attorney’s fees and court costs.
This article does not change the existing assumption of risk doctrine as it applies to ski resorts.