Rich Hass is our current USHPA president, a member of the NWPC, an excellent paraglider pilot, and a skilled mediator who has worked tirelessly to ensure the future of flying in the Northwest and the entire country.
Member Chapter Importance and Cooperation
by Rich Hass
Rich Hass at the 2006-2007 NWPC Awards Gala photo Chris Amonson |
NWPC is one of more than a hundred
chapters in the US affiliated with the US Hang Gliding and Paragliding
Association. Through the chapter affiliation program, USHPA is able to provide
chapters with a number of member benefits ranging from site and special event
insurance to providing help in developing new flying sites and protecting the
ones we already have. Chapters are independent and are, for the most part, free
to manage club affairs and local flying sites as they see fit.
Due to a recent spike in claims
activity, the USHPA insurance program has been under close scrutiny. In 2012,
the London-based syndicate providing USHPA’s member and site insurance told
USHPA to find ways to reduce claims through an active risk management program
if it wants to continue offering insurance as a membership benefit. Since USHPA
doesn’t manage sites, this effort requires close cooperation between USHPA and
its chapters. After several months work, substantially all of the chapters have
evaluated the sites they manage (insured or not) and developed plans for
reducing risk. These plans are now being implemented.
USHPA’s ability to offer site
insurance and third-party liability insurance is dependent on reducing accident
claims. Notwithstanding the importance of risk assessment plans, the best way
to minimize claims begins with every pilot taking responsibility for not only
looking after their own safety but the safety of other pilots, spectators and
property owners as well. This is an important mindset. So far, this initiative
seems to be working—time will tell.
The insurance program is available
in part because USHPA members agree to waive certain rights to sue for damages.
It’s the waiver that enables USHPA to secure site insurance and without a
members-only requirement at USHPA-insured sites, site insurance wouldn’t be
available. The second reason for the members-only requirement is, site
insurance only insures landowners against claims involving USHPA members. When
chapters secure site insurance through USHPA, landowners expect those chapters
to limit access to USHPA members; otherwise, they aren’t insured. Chapters and
USHPA need to act in good faith by limiting access to those who are insured.
Rich Hass on Chelan Butte 2007. photo Chris Amonson |
The question often arises, how
best to deal with pilots who refuse to support the sites we fly? Chapters are
only expected to do so much. More often than not, when pilots understand how
their actions may jeopardize a particular site or jeopardize USHPA’s ability to
secure insurance nationally, they cooperate. Chapters are expected to make
reasonable efforts to enforce the members-only requirement. This is best
accomplished by educating pilots to the importance of keeping site insurance
available. Chapters use signs on launch and in LZ’s, helmet stickers and
printed lists of authorized (and not authorized) pilots. At Tiger Mountain,
where NWPC subsidizes the shuttle operation, limiting access on the shuttle to
those authorized to fly seems like a reasonable request. Circumstances vary and
it is up to chapters to determine how best to satisfy these requirements.
Some say chapters or USHPA have no
right to prevent pilots from flying on public property. That may be technically
true, but does anyone doubt the right of a public agency to ban flying from a particular
site? Unfortunately, there are numerous examples where sites that have been
lost. Landowners expect the flying community to self regulate. It’s far easier
for a landowner to close a site than police it themselves.
Rich Hass at Woodrat Mtn 2005. photo Chris Amonson |
Given the challenges USHPA is
experiencing with preserving its insurance program, USHPA is asking chapters to
help by working through the risk management plans and adhering to the
members-only requirement at insured sites. In 2012, USHPA’s insurance premium
doubled after USHPA was able to get the program reinstated. It’s unclear what
lies ahead. What is clear is, USHPA needs the support of its members and
chapters in developing a culture where safety comes first. This initiative can
succeed if every pilot participates and shares in the responsibility for
maintaining safe flying conditions and complying with the insurance requirements
at insured sites. The responsibility of enforcement shouldn’t rest on the
shoulders of chapter officers or the shuttle operator alone; every pilot is a
stakeholder and every pilot should pitch in and help.
Rich Hass.
Wow. Great news Rich! Congratulations!
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