Which U.S. Cities Are Banning Sledding?
It's all fun and games until someone gets hurt and sues, so
some cities are nixing sleds on public land.
By Svati Kirsten Narula in City Lab
Some things in life that are fun are
also dangerous. Sliding down a snow-covered hill on a sled—or a toboggan, or an
inner tube, or a cafeteria tray—is one of those things. Sledding is
particularly fun and dangerous if the bottom of one’s sled is slick (video) or the snow is icy.
Or while traveling down the hill
headfirst.
It is widely considered a wholesome,
family-friendly activity, one whose risks are generally accepted and often
ignored by children and their parents.
Until someone gets hurt, that is.
Then legal action can ensue.
Local governments can be held liable
for injuries that occur in parks and other public areas—and with at least 20,000 sledding injuries
occurring in the U.S. each year,
public officials have plenty of potential lawsuits to be wary of. For this
reason, as the Associated Press recently reported, a growing number of U.S.
cities are banning sledding on public
property. Following sledding accidents, one Nebraska family won a $2 million
payout from the city of Omaha and another family secured a $2.75 million
settlement from Sioux City, Iowa. Both cases involved individuals who survived
their accidents but were paralyzed for life.
An employee of the city of Dubuque,
Iowa, which is banning sledding in all but two of its 50 parks this year,
acknowledged to Newsweek that the ban isn’t likely to
be too strictly enforced. At
worst, she suggested, people who repeatedly ignore requests to stop sledding
where it’s prohibited will be subject to fines. The city of Omaha previously
tried to ban sledding at a popular hill one winter, but residents continued sledding
there anyway and the city gave up on enforcing the rule.
In Washington, D.C., the law
mandates that children under the age of 16 wear helmets when sledding. A study
of pediatric
sledding-related injuries between 1997 and 2007 found that head injuries occurred in 34 percent of all the
cases in which individuals under age 19 went to the emergency room after
sledding accidents.
Eleven-year-old boys account for
more of these accidents than other children, according to the same study.
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