DES MOINES, Iowa – As anyone who has grown up around snow knows, part of the fun of sledding is the risk of soaring off a jump or careening around a tree.
But faced with the potential bill from sledding injuries, some cities have opted to close hills rather than risk large liability claims.
No one tracks how many cities have banned or limited sledding, but the list grows every year. One of the latest is in Dubuque, Iowa, where the City Council is moving ahead with a plan to ban sledding in all but two of its 50 parks.
“We have all kinds of parks that have hills on them,” said Marie Ware, Dubuque’s leisure services manager. “We can’t manage the risk at all of those places.”
A study by Columbus, Ohio-based Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children’s Hospital found that between 1997 and 2007, more than 20,000 children each year were treated at emergency rooms for sledding-related injuries.
In meetings leading up to the ban, Dubuque council members lamented the move but said it was the only responsible choice given liability concerns and demands from the city’s insurance carrier. They pointed to judgments in sledding lawsuits in the past decade, such as a $2 million judgment against Omaha, Nebraska, after a 5-year-old girl was paralyzed when she hit a tree and a $2.75 million payment when a man in Sioux City, Iowa, slid into a sign and injured his spinal cord.
Some cities have opted for less drastic measures in the last several years rather than an all-out ban, including Des Moines, Iowa; Montville, New Jersey; Lincoln, Nebraska; and Columbia City, Indiana. By banning sledding on certain slopes or posting signs warning people to sled at their own risk, cities lessen their liability if someone is seriously hurt, but they’re still more vulnerable to lawsuits than if they had adopted an outright ban.
And then there’s the small central Illinois city of Paxton, where park district officials removed the sledding hill in 2013.
It was more of a dirt mound, created years ago to cover a pile of concrete, metal and other junk, recreation director Neal McKenry said, but given how flat the area is, the 20-foot rise often was crowded with sledders. There was concern someone would slam into trees that had grown on the mound.
“Obviously, many people used this area to sled in the winter, but the park district never promoted it as a sled hill,” McKenry said. “It was simply a built-up mound of dirt that people happened to sled on.” The area is now being used as a dog park.
In Omaha, the city banned sledding at a popular hill as a test one winter after losing a lawsuit, but decided to allow it again after most people ignored the restriction.
“It wasn’t practical,” assistant city attorney Tom Mumgaard said. “People wouldn’t abide by the ban.”
Instead, the city has posted signs warning of sledding risks and workers at the site of the failed ban put pads around posts and hay bales around trees. Mumgaard said courts in Nebraska have decided cities must protect people, even if they make poor choices.
Most people realize that cities must restrict potentially dangerous activities to protect people and guard against costly lawsuits, said Kenneth Bond, a New York lawyer who represents local governments. In the past, people might have embraced a Wild West philosophy of individuals being solely responsible for their actions, but now they expect government to prevent dangers whenever possible.
“It’s a great idea on the frontier, but we don’t live on the frontier anymore,” Bond said.
That doesn’t sit well with Natasha Koss, 40, who frequently sleds with her 5-year-old daughter Elsa in Marquette, Michigan.
Koss sometimes requires Elsa to wear a helmet. When they try a particular hill for the first time, her husband does a few runs solo as a precaution. She said she’d report any safety issues to city authorities but couldn’t imagine filing suit over a sledding mishap.
“I would most certainly take personal responsibility,” she said. “You need to have a mindset to make the best decisions for your own safety.”
However, Steve King, who runs a website that promotes sledding, said he understands why cities impose restrictions. He notes that most sledders don’t wear helmets and it’s near impossible to steer away from trees, rocks or signs.
“We live in a lawsuit-happy society and cities are just being protective by banning sledding in areas that pose a risk for injury or death,” King said.
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/01/05/liability-concerns-prompt-some-cities-to-ban-sledding/
The wussification of America continues unabated. Thank goodness we have our own hill where the grandkiddies (and their parents) can enjoy sledding to their hearts content.
I agree with you about the wussification of America Frank, however not on this issue.
If you read the article you will see this Iowa city is trying to protect the tax paying citizen from moronic lawsuits stemming from idiots thinking that any of their actions are the local, county, state, or federal responsibility.
I loved sledding though it scared the heck out of me…suppose to…and even had an incident in the San Berdo mountains with my son on a inner tube. Though his tube took a bad bounce and he hit a tree I never once thought of suing for me letting him do this, I only thought of him and insuring he was okay…which he was.
This is simply (believe it or not) politicians looking out for the betterment of tax payer dollars over the idiots that love to sue even if it is a worm crawling on a sidewalk.
In the 50s and early 60s me and my brother and his friends used to drag our sleds about half a mile to a street that had a good downhill slope in our neighborhood and with a watcher down below to watch for cars (we took turns watching of course) we’d have a great time sledding, and no on ever had to worry about cars hitting them (this was on Long Island)…one of the things I am proud of myself over was this, being able to “sled with the boys” (not be a wussy girl, like my girl friends were, afraid to sled down a hill). Here I am at age 62 and I still have no fear of sledding or inner tubing… Living in the mountains now in Texas I have made sure my kids were able to play like I used to.
When organizations like the NFL have to make up programs like “NFL Play 60” (encouraging kids to play sports or quasi-sports activities for 60 minutes) when in my day it was SOP is truly sad…kids nowadays do virtually nothing but Facebook, Twitter, and video games being a bunch of couch potatoes. And some think it’s just ADHD drugs and GMO food…
Oh, and, I never wore a helmet either…
Unfrigginbelievable……Americans have truly become a bunch of cowards and weaklings. What’s next? Banning the breaking of a nail?
This is just like the bicycle helmet thing. No one wore a helmet while riding a bike for years on end and since someone bitched about a head injury, the whole country has to wear a helmet while riding a bicycle.
Unfrigginbelievable……..