Title: Minors' waivers Post by: sandysensei on February 01, 2011, 01:35:20 PM Recent and not so recent court rulings have indicated that waivers signed by minors or those signed on their behalf by parents or guardians are invalid. This leaves organizations open to law suit that is, potentially, financially disastrous. How are we dealing with this around the province?
Title: Re: Minors' waivers Post by: Swordfish on February 04, 2011, 01:21:28 AM Okay I'll bite.
Just off the top of my head in no particular order: - plenty of jurisdictions to not recognize waivers (namely civil law jurisdictions), nevermind waivers signed on behalf of minors. Lack of waivers doesn't stop business from being done. - if you're in business, especially where harming a child or others is a concern, then get business insurance. - don't be negligent. - apportionment of risk. The business owner is in a better position safeguard the wellbeing of a child than the child. - what's the context here? Did you or someone you know maim a child? I guess the long summary is this: If you operate a business that doesn't have the sense to carry adequate business insurance and you operate in such a negligent manner that a child is hurt, maimed or killed, then your business deserves to crash and burn. Or better yet, do everyone a favour and don't do it in the first place. |