Climbing - Outdoor Rock Climbing

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Climbing - Outdoor Rock Climbing Secondary - Curricular 2017 For climbing programs where students may belay. This does not include outdoor ascending lines, ziplines or bouldering. This activity page must be presented to the activity provider prior to the activity taking place. The activity provider must meet the minimum requirements listed on this page. For more information on planning trips using outside providers, consult Appendix N - Outside Activity Providers. Consult Climbing General Procedures. Climbing - Outdoor Rock Climbing Page 1 of 7

Equipment All equipment must be inspected prior to activity by qualified personnel to determine that it is safe for use. A fully stocked first aid kit must be readily accessible. A working communication device (e.g., cell phone) must be available for all activities/locations. All equipment must be commercially and specifically manufactured for the intended climbing related activity and adhere to one of: UIAA, CE, NFPA, ULC, CSA, ASTM standards. All climbing equipment must set up and inspected by a qualified professional. Climbing ropes must be compatible with the chosen belay device and the climbing activity. Helmets that are commercially and specifically manufactured for climbing must be properly fitted (as per manufacturer s guidelines) and properly worn by everyone at the climbing site. Climbing harnesses, sit or full body, appropriate for the age and/or body size of the climber must be used. Belay devices must be connected with a locking carabiner rated at 22kN/2200kg/ 4945lbs., where commercial friction or camming devices are used. Top anchors must: have a minimum of 2 independent points have locking devices be able to sustain a load of 22kN/2200kg/4945lbs. Climbers must not be able to climb above anchors. A bottom anchor must consist of a ground anchor in combination with a belayer harness. Bottom anchors must have a belay device connected with a locking carabiner and the anchoring system must be capable of sustaining a load of 10kN/1000kg/2240lbs. Climbing - Outdoor Rock Climbing Page 2 of 7

Clothing/Footwear/Jewellery Clothing and footwear appropriate to the activities and environmental conditions must be worn. No tops with drawstrings. Nothing around the neck deemed hazardous by the qualified instructor. No exposed jewellery. Medic alert identification (bracelet/necklace) is not be removed. Where it poses a safety hazard, it is to be taped. Facilities Determine that all sites are established sites. Climbing at sites where: land owner has given permission for instruction in climbing, and, recognition for rock climbing is provided by a reputable source (e.g., Rock Climbing Guidebook, instructor in the rock climbing community) Where the surrounding outdoor activity area may present a hazard (e.g., rock falls, poison ivy), information and instruction on how to minimize the risk of injury from occurring must be communicated to students. Climbing must be appropriate for ability levels, age and size of students. Special Rules/Instructions Be aware of students whose medical conditions (e.g., asthma, anaphylaxis, casts, previous concussion, orthopaedic device) may affect participation (consult the Generic Section). Risks involved with the activities must be communicated to parents/guardians with a signed response form from the parents/guardians, giving permission for student to participate. Where the activity takes students off campus, parents/guardians must be made aware of means of transportation used. Completed medical forms for each participating student must be accessible. Prior to the first lesson, teachers must inform climbing instructors of students who have special needs (e.g., behavioural, language). Climbing - Outdoor Rock Climbing Page 3 of 7

Risks involved with each activity and how to lower the risk of an injury from occurring must be communicated to the students. Prior to participation students must receive training or information on concussion prevention and awareness specific to the activity, information on the possible risks of the activity and procedures and rules for safe play. Students must not participate in the activity until these instructions have been received. Teachers, instructors and students must be aware of safety procedures. Skills must be taught in proper progression. Students waiting to climb must be positioned: a safe distance away from the base of the climb or, be tied off if within 3m (10 ) of the top edge of the cliff A recognized descent route must be used to reach the base of the cliff. When students are belaying, the following elements must be addressed in an introductory lesson prior to toprope climbing: the introductory lesson be identified as top rope specific; the introductory lesson must be identified as specific to the belay device being used; the introductory lesson must include instruction on and repeat practice of: correct use of harness correct use of knots and tie-in points concept of top-roping correct use of belay device general belaying principles lowering procedures communication and the climber/belayer contract procedures to minimize the hazards of falling rock Students must be allowed to select a challenge at their comfort level, including the choice to not participate. Teachers, instructors and supervisors must be aware of the possibility of peer pressure and make sure no student is coerced into participating. A qualified instructor must do a safety check of any student leaving the ground. A buddy belay (when students are belaying) must be incorporated into all belay systems at all times. In most conventional top-roped belay systems an approximate climber to belayer weight ratio is 1:1 when there is no ground anchor. Climber/belayer weight ratio must be taken into consideration when determining the number of buddy belayers necessary in any non-ground anchored system. A body belay and a counter-balanced system (e.g., Australian Belay) are not to be used. Climbing - Outdoor Rock Climbing Page 4 of 7

A belay system/technique that will not allow the climber to ground-fall in the event that the belayer becomes incapacitated must be used by student belayers. Lead climbing by students must not be done. For Climb Only Programs Prior to climbing, rules must clearly be explained to students by a qualified instructor. Students are not permitted to belay, and, unless directly supervised by instructor, students are not permitted to: apply harnesses to themselves or others tie knots for themselves or others Weather conditions must not present a safety issue. Water replacement and nutritional needs of climbers must be addressed. Environmental considerations Before involving students in outdoor activity, teachers must take into consideration: environmental conditions (temperature, weather, air quality, humidity, UV index, insects) accessibility to adequate liquid replacement (personal water bottles, water fountains) and student hydration before, during and after physical activity previous training and fitness level length of time and intensity of physical activity Students must be made aware of ways to protect themselves from environmental conditions (e.g. use of hats, sunscreen, sunglasses, personal water bottles, insect repellent, appropriate clothing). Insect repellent and sunscreen must not be applied to palms of hands. Repellent must not come into contact with rope. The school board must provide their lightning policy to the operator/provider. Students must receive instruction on safety procedures related to severe weather conditions (e.g., lightning, funnel clouds, severe winds, tornadoes [consult Lightning Appendix]). Supervision On-site supervision by both a teacher and qualified instructor(s) who must be present for all aspects of the activity. If the teacher is providing rock climbing instruction, an additional teacher/supervisor must be provided. Climbing - Outdoor Rock Climbing Page 5 of 7

Constant visual supervision must be provided when students are climbing. A safety check of each student leaving the ground must be done by an instructor in all initial and subsequent climbing sessions. Supervision Ratios For initial instruction - 1 climbing instructor per 2 active lines. The overall ratio must not exceed 1 climbing instructor per 6 students. After initial instruction and when subsequent sessions are within a reasonable time frame: 1 climbing instructor to 3 lines. The overall ratio must not exceed 1 climbing instructor per 9 students. For Climb Only Programs: 1 instructor per belay activity. For intramural clubs that go to outdoor sites with a commercial climbing provider, all the above ratios apply for the first three visits of instructional time (minimum 16 hours) that take place in a reasonable time frame. After three separate visits (total time must be minimum 16 hours): an instructor provides a belay check of each student there must be on-site supervision by the instructor 1 teacher per 16 students ratio Instructor Qualifications Instructors must be trained in, understand, demonstrate, and adhere to a directly relevant skill set for Outdoor Rock Climbing. A relevant skill set is a described set of skills developed by recognized climbing professionals. All instructors must be at least 18 years of age or older to teach the introductory lesson and/or be an instructor. First Aid and Emergency Action Plan On school site: Follow the school s emergency action plan including accessibility to a vehicle for transportation of a student to hospital (consult Appendix E - Emergency Action Plan). Off site: At least one instructor or an individual responsible for providing first aid must have current First Aid qualifications equivalent to or exceeding St. John Ambulance Emergency First Aid with CPR Level C + AED. Climbing - Outdoor Rock Climbing Page 6 of 7

Also see Generic Section to view complete safety requirements. 2017 Ophea Climbing - Outdoor Rock Climbing Page 7 of 7