Over on another thread, Dale Beasley wrote:
Addressing the issue of what an event is legally obligated to provide, and not the issue of medical professionals and good samaritan laws...
I was thinking about this as well, and I'm curious what the legal obligations actually are. I mean actual examples of case law or whatever, showing what standard a reenactment-type event would be required to provide to participants.
Because here's what I don't get.
Let's say I decide to go camping on private or public land. I go out alone, I don't have a cell phone or an EMT standing by, or any way to be evacuated. That's normal, for some of the population. Other segments of the population wouldn't dare stray out of sight of civilization. But lots of hunters and backpackers do it all the time. I do it all the time.
So let's say I go to the same or a similar site, camping and hiking, everything pretty much the same except for the funny clothes and gear and the fact that fifty or a hundred other people are there for roughly the same purpose. I'm still there voluntarily, not paying anyone to care for me, anymore than when I was alone. Except now, I can't do it without trained medical people standing by and an evacuation plan.
Why? I mean, I know that's how society works, but what is the actual legal basis? It's not like medical problems at a small event would swamp a local hospital, like a festival that might suddenly bring 50,000 new people into a town of 10,000.
Is it just because there was no one to sue before when I was alone, but now there might be, and those people are trying to cover their ass? How does a small-scale EBUFU event differ, legally, from a group of friends out hunting together who chipped in a few bucks to pay for food and permits? What legal definition or legal standards is an event held to, and how do you know when it reaches that threshold of "event" vs. "friends camping"?
Hank Trent
hanktrent@voyager.net
While having dinner with my wife (also an RN) and her mother who is btw an attorney, who puts no faith in the good samaritian law. We can say we are a brotherhood, and we would never sue anyone, but we know that is not true. The event organizers are under legal obiligation to provide a safety net for injuries and a plan of evacuation.
I was thinking about this as well, and I'm curious what the legal obligations actually are. I mean actual examples of case law or whatever, showing what standard a reenactment-type event would be required to provide to participants.
Because here's what I don't get.
Let's say I decide to go camping on private or public land. I go out alone, I don't have a cell phone or an EMT standing by, or any way to be evacuated. That's normal, for some of the population. Other segments of the population wouldn't dare stray out of sight of civilization. But lots of hunters and backpackers do it all the time. I do it all the time.
So let's say I go to the same or a similar site, camping and hiking, everything pretty much the same except for the funny clothes and gear and the fact that fifty or a hundred other people are there for roughly the same purpose. I'm still there voluntarily, not paying anyone to care for me, anymore than when I was alone. Except now, I can't do it without trained medical people standing by and an evacuation plan.
Why? I mean, I know that's how society works, but what is the actual legal basis? It's not like medical problems at a small event would swamp a local hospital, like a festival that might suddenly bring 50,000 new people into a town of 10,000.
Is it just because there was no one to sue before when I was alone, but now there might be, and those people are trying to cover their ass? How does a small-scale EBUFU event differ, legally, from a group of friends out hunting together who chipped in a few bucks to pay for food and permits? What legal definition or legal standards is an event held to, and how do you know when it reaches that threshold of "event" vs. "friends camping"?
Hank Trent
hanktrent@voyager.net
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