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Paralyzed Skier Awarded $14 Million
- jasonsalvo
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A King County jury has awarded $14 million in damages to a 26-year-old man who was left paralyzed after a jump at Snoqualmie Pass.
The jury found that Summit at Snoqualmie operator Ski Lifts, Inc. failed to take safety into consideration at its Summit West terrain park. Because of that failure, the company was partially responsible for the crash that nearly killed Kenny Salvini in February 2004, the jury ruled.
Tacoma lawyer Jack Connelly said his client was left a quadriplegic after skiing off a badly designed "tabletop" jump at the terrain park. Connelly said 15 other skiers and snowboarders had been hurt on the jump earlier that season, but the jump was left open.
"They didn't even consider closing down the jump and closing down the landings," he said. "Nobody was paying attention. Nobody was doing anything."
Reading from a statement, spokesman Guy Lawrence said Friday that the company was "disappointed but respectful" of the jury verdict.
"At the Summit at Snoqualmie, the safety of our guests and our employees has always, and will continue to be our primary concern," he said. But, Lawrence added, participation "suggest that a skier or rider accepts the risks of that activity."
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- hyak.net
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I'm sorry the kid got hurt, but if your going to try crazy stunts you better know what your doing and take responsibility for your actions.
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- stoudema
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- Jerm
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On the one hand, I'm all for personal responsibility on the mountain. On the other, it amazes me that terrain parks have existed as long as they have without a case like this.
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- jasonsalvo
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- powscraper
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seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews...skijumpaward07m.html
"Going off this jump was the equivalent of jumping off a three-story building," Connelly said. "If you're going to be throwing kids 37 feet in the air, these jumps need to be engineered, designed and constructed properly."
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"According to Connelly, other people were injured on the same jump in the weeks before Salvini's accident, including a snowboarder who broke his back. A week after Salvini was injured, 19-year-old Peter Melrose of Bellevue died going off a different jump at the same terrain park, he said.
"There were 10 accidents with eight people taken off the slope in a toboggan in the weeks before Salvini was hurt, landing on what Connelly said was a flat surface. In all, he said, evidence of 15 earlier accidents was admitted into evidence but 'nothing was done' by ski operators to fix or close the faulty jumps."
It sounds like something was not right in this TP. Ski area 'engineers' do need to take into account the naivete of their patrons, who are for the most part unskilled and ignorant--if you build a suicide jump, they WILL go off of it. The failure to consider this simple fact is reckless and stupid on the part of the ski area.
But you can style the potentially fatal jumps, so they must be okay...? Well, some people can shoot up massive amounts of heroin without killing themselves, but there are good reasons why it's still a controlled substance, and not legally peddled to the general public. You can always go throw big hucks out of bounds if you really need your fix.

I'm not necessarily saying that there shouldn't be huge jumps in a ski area, but if there are, they ought to have proper landings, and perhaps some official mechanism to keep newbs off of them.
In my opinion, most businesses will not change their ways except under the threat of revenue loss. So here's another 14 million reasons why the ski area might want to think a little harder about what's happening on the slopes.
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