I remember discussing it with Dave (Fast Joy Ride) quite a long time ago. He is the president of an insurance company and he thought it would be a good idea. He is off on the Three Flags Rally now but we should pick his brain when he returns.
Jude
Forgive me for this is going to sound blunt, but that's exactly what I would expect from an insurance agent. Mine would remind me to tie my shoes in the morning if she were in the same town. Did he sign a waiver prior to the Three Flags Rally? Do the IBA riders have to sign a form before starting the SPANK, BUTTLITE, or IBA ride? Does that just remove the liability from IBA or does it cover the person(s) organizing it? Although they are vastly different in scope than a rally (i.e. a competition, requiring the rider to endure long hours on the bike) these are the only events I could think of that would need a release.
I'm going to play devil's advocate here; (tongue-in-cheek here, relax before and after reading)
How can we reduce the liability to the organizers while people are out on rides Friday/Saturday? Or the routes to and from the events? If someone is injured, as two were at SFO this year, while riding in the rain, a police report would state (if provided) the cause of the accident. Would it list the rallymaster as the responsible party? It's like holding Yamaha responsible for the accident. They provided the means and limited the amount of rider protection. Jocko wrecked two bikes in the span of less than 6 months THIS YEAR and, as far as I know, hasn't sued anyone. How many people had issues getting to NAFO, and how many have thought it was Iggy or Warchild's fault? (i'd blame WC, he rode the busa, that's just not right)
If someone is mugged, robbed or run over while on hotel property, is that our liability only or the hotel's? If someone gets serious food poisoning from the banquet meal, who gets the blame for that? Victim's advocates always try to cast a huge net to provide themselves, and eventually their clients, a nice payday/damage recovery, but I believe it's their burden to prove that everyone they're pointing fingers at is responsible.
I'll ask my friends who attended Sturgis this year and find out if they had to sign a waiver to attend. To me, that's the litmus test. If 300 non-helmet-wearing riders can show up and not sign a waiver perhaps we might not need to pursue this. Is there a "Sturgis Organizers, LLC" group?
Maybe we limit the events to states not starting with the letter "C" and that end with a vowel
(JOKE, HAHA, BEING FUNNY, RELAX)
Personally, I don't care. I'll sign the form. I just think that by providing one you provoke the thoughts of suing someone else for your own mistakes (as a rider/attendee). I'd also give up the swag/name-tags not pay for anything but the meal directly to the provider if it limited the liability of the organizers. I know several people who feel the same way. They aren't there for the banquet, they're out to ride on roads they've never been on, or as in my case, have no chance of riding near home. I'd "donate" to the cause if a jar were passed around.
:blink: