A woman fell at a dance where I was calling and her behavior indicated she was considering
legal action, of which I would have been the likely target. (She was not hurt.) She
didn't follow through, but it sure made me glad I had insurance.
Joyce Miller
Grass Valley, CA
On Mar 31, 2010, at 6:58 PM, David Millstone wrote:
Bree asked, "...can you say more about the
reasons to have insurance?"
One simple and practical reason is that many halls now require proof of
insurance before they will let a dance group-- or others, for that matter-- use
the facility. Having this slip of paper has made it possible for our band to
hold a monthly dance in the local town hall. Without it, no way.
And then there's the reason that I've not needed so far, which is someone
falling down on the dance floor and getting seriously injured, and sueing the
caller, having decided that it's your fault-- not controlling the crowd
properly, failure to give adequate warning of the dangers involved, not giving
proper safety precautions, choosing a dance that was inappropriate for that
particular crowd. Sure, you might well win the case in court, but it'd be nice
to have the insurance company paying for your defense. Unlikely? Yep, but so are
many other litigious situations in which people find themselves.
Someone died at a dance where I was calling but there was no legal action
involved in that one. Still, not fun...
I figure that caller's insurance is like any other kind of insurance... you pay
your money-- as Chris said, it's not a large sum-- and hope that you never need
it.
David Millstone
Lebanon, NH
_______________________________________________
Callers mailing list
Callers(a)sharedweight.net
http://www.sharedweight.net/mailman/listinfo/callers