Harksaw 0 #1 December 2, 2003 Heres an idea.. Would it be practical for the USPA to have one waiver that would be applicable for numerous dropzones? Have it listed on your USPA card that you have signed, then be free to go to any participating dz without needing to sign your name twenty five times. This could be completely voluntary and any dropzone that did not want to participate would have people sign their own waivers as normal. Would this kind of a waiver be less enforceable in court? Also, I am assuming that every drop zone has essentially the same things on their waivers with little difference. Any thoughts?__________________________________________________ I started skydiving for the money and the chicks. Oh, wait. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hazarrd 1 #2 December 2, 2003 Every state has a different set of laws. In some states, youll find that you only need to fill out 1 piece of paper, but in others you will be filling out 10. It would be extremely difficult to make one generic waiver. However, it would be a good idea.. .-. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
quade 4 #3 December 2, 2003 I was unaware that the drop zone waiver had anything to do with the USPA. And why would they get into that business anyway?quade - The World's Most Boring Skydiver Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
darkwing 5 #4 December 2, 2003 I interpreted the question more as USPA being a clearinghouse for waivers, but the other response addressed the difficulty with that issue anyway. Waivers are too "personalized" to each DZ to be subject to the clearinghouse mode. -- Jeff My Skydiving History Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Harksaw 0 #5 December 2, 2003 They don't, but it would be a service they could organize better than any other organization I can think of.__________________________________________________ I started skydiving for the money and the chicks. Oh, wait. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
WFFC 1 #6 December 2, 2003 two words - administrative nighmare Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites