A bill shifting roller-skating rink liability to skaters rather than rink owners is rolling through legislative committees.
The House Civil Justice Committee unanimously approved the "Roller Skating Rink Safety Act" (HB 1129), a bill sponsored by Orlando Rep. Susan Plasencia.
That legislation would shift liability burdens in many cases to skaters and patrons rather than management and ownership, with the goal of lowering insurance premiums for owners and operators of the roughly 41 rinks left in the Sunshine State.
What the bill calls "allocation of risks and costs" bears a disproportionate impact on rink owners and operators, preventing the insuring of these operations from being "economically feasible" for carriers. This bill would shift the burden to the consumer, aligning it with similar statutory language covering skateboarding, inline skating, paintball, and freestyle, mountain and off-road bicycling.
An amendment added Tuesday required rinks to have at least one supervisor on hand at all times, which the sponsor said shifted more responsibility to the skating facilities.
Owners "face great difficulty in obtaining liability insurance coverage at an affordable cost and that the lack of affordable insurance coverage affects not only owners of roller-skating rinks, but also persons who may suffer personal injuries or property damages as a result of accidents that occur on the premises of a roller-skating rink," the bill contends.
Thus, "occurrences resulting in liability to owners should be more predictable by limiting the liability that may be incurred by the owners and encouraging the development and implementation of risk reduction techniques."
Owners would bear the responsibility of posting at least three signs prominently that inform skaters and patrons of their risks, as well as having at least one manager on hand for every 200 customers. They are also charged with keeping the skating surface in a "reasonably safe" condition.
Skaters are responsible for maintaining "reasonable control" of speed and direction, meanwhile, as well as "proper awareness" of potential hazards that include other skaters and inanimate objects.
Florida would join Alabama, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Michigan, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, South Carolina and Texas with legislation governing rink liability if this bill becomes law.
Chanel Bellotto, the owner of Lakeland Skate World, spoke on behalf of the Roller Skating Association in the House committee. The "third-generation operator" blamed litigation for the decline in rinks in recent years, with insurance premiums up to 40% higher than some other states.
The Senate version of the bill is on wheels also. SB 1458, sponsored by Sen. Clay Yarborough of Jacksonville, will be heard by Judiciary Tuesday. Yarborough chairs that committee.
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