Podcasts

Surviving Summer: Managing Risks and Forms for Kids' Activities

Short Summary

In this episode of "Ask the Lawyer," hosts Cynthia Carels and Kristina Tiessen from Weir Bowen LLP discuss common legal issues that arise from summer activities, focusing on the forms parents must sign for their children to participate in these activities. They explore the implications of waivers and consent forms, highlighting how these documents can affect a parent's ability to seek legal recourse if their child is injured. The hosts also touch on the responsibilities of those who organize and oversee children's activities, and how Alberta's legal framework, particularly the Minor’s Property Act, offers protections. The episode emphasizes the importance of seeking legal advice, even if a waiver has been signed, to ensure children's rights and safety are adequately protected.

INDIGENOUS LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

The lands on which Edmonton sits and the North Saskatchewan River that runs through it have been the sites of natural abundance, ceremony and culture, travel and rest, relationship building, making, and trading for Indigenous peoples since time immemorial. Edmonton is located within Treaty 6 Territory and within the Metis homelands and Metis Nation of Alberta Region 4. We acknowledge this land as the traditional territories of many First Nations such as the Nehiyaw (Cree), Denesuline (Dene), Nakota Sioux (Stoney), Anishinaabe (Saulteaux) and Niitsitapi (Blackfoot).

Weir Bowen acknowledges the many First Nations, Métis and Inuit who have lived in and cared for these lands for generations. We are grateful for the traditional Knowledge Keepers and Elders who are still with us today and those who have gone before us. We make this acknowledgement as an act of reconciliation and gratitude to those whose territory we reside on or are visiting.