BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    



                                                                       



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          |SENATE RULES COMMITTEE            |                   SB 880|
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                              UNFINISHED BUSINESS


          Bill No:  SB 880
          Author:   Yee (D), et al
          Amended:  8/12/10
          Vote:     21

           
           SENATE HEALTH COMMITTEE  :  6-2, 4/14/10
          AYES:  Alquist, Cedillo, Cox, Leno, Negrete McLeod, Pavley
          NOES:  Strickland, Aanestad
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Romero

           SENATE APPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE  :  Senate Rule 28.8

           SENATE FLOOR  :  21-13, 6/1/10
          AYES:  Alquist, Calderon, Cedillo, Corbett, Cox,  
            DeSaulnier, Florez, Hancock, Kehoe, Leno, Liu, Lowenthal,  
            Negrete McLeod, Padilla, Pavley, Price, Simitian,  
            Steinberg, Wolk, Wright, Yee
          NOES:  Aanestad, Ashburn, Cogdill, Correa, Denham, Ducheny,  
            Dutton, Harman, Hollingsworth, Huff, Runner, Strickland,  
            Wyland
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Oropeza, Romero, Walters, Wiggins,  
            Vacancy, Vacancy

           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  :  51-25, 8/19/10 - See last page for vote


           SUBJECT  :    Public safety:  snow sport helmets

           SOURCE  :     California Psychological Association


           DIGEST  :    This bill requires any person under 18 years of  
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          age to wear a properly fitted and fastened snow sport  
          helmet, that meets specified standards, while downhill  
          skiing or snowboarding, or while riding upon a seat or  
          other device that is attached, and imposes a fine of $25  
          for a violation of this requirement. 

           Assembly Amendments  strike a reference to "lift tickets,"  
          as it relates to ski helmet requirements, clarify that the  
          bill shall become operative only if AB 1652 (Jones) is also  
          enacted, and add a principal co-author.

           ANALYSIS  :    Existing federal law provides that the  
          Secretary of Agriculture is authorized to issue permits for  
          the use and occupancy of lands within the National Forest  
          System for Nordic and alpine skiing operations and  
          purposes. 

          Existing state law:

          1. Requires a person under 18 years of age to wear a  
             properly fitted and fastened bicycle helmet while  
             operating a bicycle, or riding upon a bicycle as a  
             passenger, upon the streets or any other public bicycle  
             path. 

          2. Regulates certain behavior related to recreational  
             activities and public safety, including among other  
             activities, skateboarding and recreational water use.

          3. Establishes that every person who willfully commits a  
             trespass by knowingly skiing in an area, or on a ski  
             trail, which is closed to the public and which has signs  
             posted indicating the closure is guilty of a  
             misdemeanor. 
           
          4. Prohibits operators of skateboard parks from permitting  
             any person to ride a skateboard therein, unless the  
             person is wearing specified protective equipment,  
             including a helmet.  Establishes that any recreational  
             skateboard facility owned or operated by a local public  
             agency, that is not supervised on a regular basis, can  
             be deemed in compliance with the protective equipment  
             requirement by (a) adoption of a local ordinance  
             requiring any person riding a skateboard at the facility  

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             to wear protective equipment, and (b) posting signs at  
             the facility alerting riders of the requirement to wear  
             protective equipment, and stating that any person  
             failing to do so will be subject to citation.  

          This bill:

          1. Prohibits persons under 18 years of age from operating  
             snow skis or a snowboard, or from riding upon a seat or  
             device attached to snow skis or a snowboard, while  
             downhill skiing or snowboarding, without a properly  
             fitted and fastened snow sport helmet meeting specified  
             standards. 

          2. Establishes a fine of $25 for any violation of this  
             bill.  Dismisses charges against a person for violating  
             this bill, if the person alleges in court under oath  
             that this is their first charge. 

          3. Makes the parent or legal guardian of an unemancipated  
             minor jointly and severally liable with the minor for  
             the fine. 

          4. Exempts Nordic skiing (i.e. cross-country) from these  
             provisions. 

          5. Provides that this bill does not increase or decrease  
             duties imposed under existing law. 

          6. Requires ski resorts to post signs at the resort giving  
             reasonable notice of specified helmet provisions and  
             provide notice of the requirement on all trail maps, and  
             resort Internet Web sites. 

          7. States that this bill shall become operative only if AB  
             1652 (Jones) is also enacted. 

           Background

          Risk of injury from skiing  .  According to the National Ski  
          Areas Association, serious injuries (paraplegics, serious  
          head and other serious injuries) occur at the rate of about  
          43.6 per year.  In the 2007/2008 season, there were 41  
          serious injuries.  Thirty-two of these serious injuries  

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          were skiers and nine were snowboarders.  The rate of  
          serious injury in 2007/2008 was 0.68 per million  
          skier/snowboarder visits.  According to a Centers for  
          Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) study in the journal,  
           Wilderness and Environmental Medicine  , more people are hurt  
          snowboarding than any other outdoor activity, accounting  
          for a quarter of emergency room visits.  Almost 213,000  
          people were treated each year in emergency departments for  
          outdoor recreational injuries from 2004 to 2005.  Of those  
          injured, approximately 109,000 (51.5 percent) were young  
          people between the ages of 10 and 24. 

           Prior/Related Legislation

           AB 1652 (Jones), 2009-10 Session, requires ski resorts to  
          prepare an annual safety plan and create a monthly summary  
          report stating the number of deaths and injuries at the  
          resort.  Requires a person under 18 years of age and a  
          person employed by a ski resort to wear a properly fitted  
          and fastened snow sport helmet when operating snow skis or  
          a snowboard.  The bill is on the Assembly Third Reading  
          File.

          AB 990 (Jones), 2009-10 Session, would have required ski  
          resorts to prepare and file an annual safety report with  
          Division of Occupational Safety and Health (DOSH) and to  
          report to the DOSH on a quarterly basis any serious  
          injuries or fatalities involving patrons at the ski resort.  
           The bill was held in the Assembly Appropriations  
          Committee.

          SB 284 (Cox), 2009-10 Session, would have required DOSH to  
          utilize the most current safety standards when inspecting  
          aerial passenger tramways operated at ski resorts.  The  
          bill would have also required ski resorts to file an annual  
          safety plan with the DOSH, make the safety plan available  
          on demand, report to DOSH, within 24 hours, any fatalities  
          involving patrons at the resort, and standardize safety  
          signage and equipment padding in use at the resort.  The  
          bill died in the Senate Labor and Industrial Relations  
          Committee.  

          SB 1924 (O'Connell), Chapter 475, Statutes of 2002,  
          requires that persons under 18 years of age wear a helmet  

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          while operating a nonmotorized scooter or skateboard or  
          riding upon a nonmotorized scooter or skateboard as a  
          passenger. 

          AB 2218 (Keeley), 2001-02 Session, would have created the  
          California Ski Safety Task Force, required the Task Force  
          to adopt uniform sign standards for adoption by California  
          ski areas, and would have required the Task Force to make  
          recommendations regarding safety.  The bill failed passage  
          in the Senate Appropriations Committee.

          AB 2268 (Caldera), Chapter 1000, Statutes of 1993,  
          prohibits a person under 18 years of age from operating, or  
          riding upon a bicycle as a passenger, upon a street,  
          bikeway, or other public bicycle path or trail unless the  
          person is wearing a helmet meeting specified standards. 

           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  No   Fiscal Com.:  Yes    
          Local:  Yes

           SUPPORT  :   (Verified  8/19/10)

          California Psychological Association (source)
          American Board of Trial Advocates
          American College of Emergency Physicians, California  
          Chapter
          American Psychological Association, Division of Clinical  
          Neuropsychology
          Association of California Insurance Companies
          California Brain Injury Association
          California Children's Hospital Association
          California Chiropractic Association
          California Emergency Nurses Association
          California Hospital Association
          California Medical Association
          California Nurses Association
          California Psychiatric Association
          California School Nurses Organization
          California Ski Industry Association
          California Society of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
          Children's Advocacy Institute
          Children's Hospital and Research Center Oakland
          Children's Specialty Care Coalition
          Los Angeles County Psychological Association

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          National Academy of Neuropsychology
          Occupational Therapy Association of California
          Richmond Area Multi-Services, Inc.
          San Gabriel Valley Psychological Association
          San Francisco Psychological Association
          Santa Barbara County Psychological Association
          Santa Clara Psychological Association


           ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :    The author's office claims that  
          enactment of this bill will decrease the number of serious  
          injuries resulting from skiing or snowboarding.  The  
          author's office contends that half of all skiing deaths are  
          caused by a head injury, and recent studies show that when  
          helmets are used, the incidence of traumatic brain or head  
          injury has been reduced 29 percent to 56 percent.  Injuries  
          that are sustained without a helmet are not only dangerous,  
          but pose significant financial hardship.  According to the  
          American Medical Association, first-year acute care costs  
          for all skiers under age 17 who sustain a head injury range  
          from $1.5 million for patients with mild traumatic brain  
          injury to $82 million for those with severe traumatic brain  
          injury (TBI).  Annual lifetime care costs per individual,  
          excluding first year costs, range from $329,000 for mild  
          TBI to $8.96 million for severe TBI.  The author's office  
          also contends that studies show that kids who have been  
          wearing helmets are more likely to wear them as they get  
          older.  


           ASSEMBLY FLOOR : 
          AYES:  Ammiano, Arambula, Bass, Beall, Block, Blumenfield,  
            Bradford, Brownley, Buchanan, Caballero, Charles  
            Calderon, Carter, Chesbro, Coto, De La Torre, De Leon,  
            Eng, Evans, Feuer, Fletcher, Fong, Fuentes, Furutani,  
            Gaines, Galgiani, Gatto, Hall, Hayashi, Hernandez, Hill,  
            Huber, Huffman, Jones, Lieu, Bonnie Lowenthal, Ma,  
            Mendoza, Monning, Nava, V. Manuel Perez, Portantino,  
            Ruskin, Salas, Saldana, Skinner, Solorio, Swanson,  
            Torres, Torrico, Yamada, John A. Perez
          NOES:  Adams, Anderson, Bill Berryhill, Tom Berryhill,  
            Blakeslee, Conway, DeVore, Fuller, Garrick, Gilmore,  
            Hagman, Harkey, Jeffries, Knight, Logue, Miller,  
            Nestande, Niello, Nielsen, Norby, Silva, Smyth, Audra  

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            Strickland, Tran, Villines
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Cook, Davis, Torlakson, Vacancy


          RJG:mw  8/20/10   Senate Floor Analyses 

                         SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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