Lynwood Lewis
- Democratic
Campgrounds; inherent risks; liability. Provides that a person who goes camping at a campground shall be presumed to have known the inherent risks of camping, defined in the bill. The bill states that a campground, an owner or operator of a campground, and any employee or officer of a campground shall be immune from civil liability for acts or omissions related to camping at a campground if a person is injured or killed, or the property of an individual or group is damaged, as a result of the inherent risks of camping. An owner or operator of a campground, and any employee or officer of a campground, may be held civilly liable under this section if the person or agents of the campground seeking immunity intentionally cause injury, death, or property damage; act with a willful or wanton disregard for the safety of others or the property of others; or fail to conspicuously post warning signs of a dangerous inconspicuous condition known on the property if the owner of the campground is aware of the condition by reason of a prior injury involving the same location or the same mechanism of injury.
Left in Judiciary
Continued to 2021 in Judiciary (8-Y 0-N)
Motion to rerefer to committee agreed to
Rereferred to Judiciary
Constitutional reading dispensed (39-Y 0-N)
Reported from General Laws and Technology (15-Y 0-N)
Impact statement from DPB (SB780)
Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/08/20 20103836D
Referred to Committee on General Laws and Technology
Bill Text Versions | Format |
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Prefiled and ordered printed; offered 01/08/20 20103836D | HTML |
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Fiscal Impact Statement: SB780F122.PDF |
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