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URBANA-Illinois landowners should reassess their options for granting
permission for use of their land for recreational purposes, according to a
recent University of Illinois Extension study.
"In some circumstances, changes in the Illinois Recreational Use Act made
this year by the Illinois legislature may actually increase a landowner's
liability risk," said Bryan Endres, a U of I College of Agricultural,
Consumer and Environmental Sciences assistant professor of agricultural
law who co-authored the study with U of I Extension agricultural law
specialist Donald Uchtmann. "This is an important issue for many Illinois
farmers who allow hunting and other recreational activities on their property.
"The changes in the law which went into effect in August actually define
protected recreational use as hunting and recreational shooting. Landowners
opening their land for hiking, swimming, bicycling, bird watching, ATV
riding or other activities are not protected from premises liability claims."
The entire report, "New Recreational Use Act for Illinois Landowner
Liability: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back," may be accessed online at
farmdoc at: http://www.farmdoc.uiuc.edu/ .
A 2003 Illinois Supreme Court decision led to the 2005 legislative action.
That court decision upset the long-settled expectation on the part of many
rural landowners that they had liability protection under the Recreational
Use Act. The decision narrowed the scope of that protection by offering
such protection only to those landowners who opened their property to the
general public for recreational use.
"According to the Court, the Act no longer protected landowners who allowed
only invited or selected guests onto their land for recreational purposes,"
said Endres.
An earlier report by Endres and Uchtmann recommended that rural landowners
should reassess the recreational use they allowed of their land. However,
the options cited by Endres and Uchtmann at that time are no longer valid
in the wake of the new law.
"We believe the new law took two steps forward and one backward," Endres
explained, "and this means a new set of options to consider."
The study's authors believe one "step forward" was the clarification of
"public" to include "selected individuals."
"The court decision required landowners to open their land to everyone to
receive liability protection. The amendments to the law passed this year by
the legislature explicitly overrule this interpretation and establish that
landowners may limit access to their property to only selected individuals
while maintaining immunity protection under the Act," said Endres.
A second "step forward" eliminates rural residences from liability protection.
"This encourages all landowners to exercise reasonable care in making
residential areas safe for permitted visitors," said Endres. "It also
furthers the original purpose of the Act--encouraging the opening of true
'open space' for outdoor activities."
However, the "step back" narrows protection by redefining "recreational or
conservation purpose" of the land.
"The 2005 amendments drastically reduced the scope of activities that
quality as 'recreational or conservation purpose' by including only
'hunting and recreational shooting' as activities that would provide the
landowner with immunity," said Endres.
"In other words, landowners opening their land are no longer protected from
premises liability claims unless the injured person was hunting or engaged
in recreational shooting."
Prior to the 2005 amendments Endres and Uchtmann outlined three options for
landowners considering granting permission for recreational use on their land.
The first option, based on the 2003 court decision, required landowners to
open their land to everyone in order to receive the Act's protection. The
2005 law overrules the court decision but limits protection to those
engaged ONLY in hunting or recreational shooting. Accordingly, opening land
to the general public is no longer a viable strategy for liability protection.
A second option is to open their lands to almost no one.
"Many landowners adopted this risk management strategy after the court
decision, and it may remain the preferred strategy for many," said Endres.
"Landowners, however, after the 2005 amendments, are now protected from
liability if the injured person was engaged in hunting or recreational
shooting even if most prospective users are denied access."
The third option is to open land to selected individuals.
"Again, this will work for hunters and recreational shooters but all other
types of recreational users will continue to fall outside the Act's scope
of liability protection," said Endres.
"Under all options, landowners should consider liability insurance to
manage risk."
Both Endres and Uchtmann expressed hopes that in the future the legislature
will again amend the Recreational Use Act.
"We believe it needs to broaden the number of recreational activities
warranting protection under the Act and restore certainty to landowners who
generously open their rural lands to the public for recreational and
conservation purposes beyond hunting and recreational shooting," said Endres.
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