flynnibus
Premium Member
Using this argument, any attraction that has seen a small handful of incidents over its lifespan, without being fundamentally altered, would have to be deemed unsafe
No - it means anything that was found to be a safety issue that the company than chooses to ignore - would result in claims of negligence. The question is 'how much of a safety issue is it?' - by making policy that solidifies the belief it poses a serious risk.. the company has set a standard it can never retreat from. It can only make changes to alter the situation to where they believe it would be safe. And even then, lawyers would argue if steps were significant enough, etc.
It's a case of 'once you admit to something, you can't later deny it'