
If we get this train wreck back on the rails with the RRG effort will the rails take the train in the same direction?
The answer is no.
Many assume (or hope) the RRG is a fix to a problem that was headed our way as part of the natural course of things.
This isn't what is going on.
Few seem to understand.
The RRG is a desperate effort to insure paragliding, now the ex-USHGA's cash cow.
U.S. hang gliding was doing fine until it decided to combine with parachuting (paragliding).
In 1986, there had been no paragliding fatalities in the USA. But an analysis of 218 paragliding accidents with 283 injuries in Germany, Austria and Switzerland between 1987 and 1989 revealed a rate of 34.9-percent (99) spinal injuries. Fifty-four of the 283 injuries resulted in permanent disability. This was a huge red flag that something was wrong with the sport of paragliding. It clearly showed us what to expect.
What-me-worry? - so then the geniuses at USHGA decided to merge with the American Paragliding Association in 1992.
Mark Shipman, MD, of the American Paragliding Association wrote in the first 1993 issue of
APA Paragliding, "Four fatalities with less than 1000 participants represents a far greater fatality risk for paragliding than one finds in Europe. This figure is also far worse than for hang gliding."
Ten years later, in 2002, the global fatality total for paragliding had risen to at least 250.
Another ten years and global paragliding fatalities had exceeded all the hang gliding fatalities in history.
Every time there is a fatality, it means somebody fell out of the sky and hit hard on the ground - where people live.
Insurers are global and keep track of these things.
They develop liability risk algorithms and apply them to insurance rates.
The risk algorithm for hang gliding (much better) was different than the one for parachuting (much worse).
Then the idiots at USHGA decided to call hang gliding and paragliding "freeflight" and forced the insurers to average the two together - to the detriment of hang gliding.
The USHPA became a wrecking ball.
So much for hang gliding's excellently improved safety record.
And so much for your relatively cheap insurance rates.
Airframes matter.
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Form a national hang gliding association that doesn't try to insure parachuting sports -