The bill is short sighted at best.
First of all, the flagpole that recently fell on the student appears to ahve been made of steel as they say it rusted from the inside out. Further, it also apears to be about 60 years old from other articles. Basically, the school failed to maintain their flagpole, did not use good judgement in allowing their students to play around a product that was deteriating and during high winds to beat all.
Secondly, there are aluminum flagpoles that would qualify accordingly to this bill but still fail the standards set up by the NAAMN association. Flagpoles are made from steel, stainless steel, bronze, aluminum and fiberglass. They will all fail under certain conditions and all need periodic maintenance and inspections. Especially when they are 60 years old.
If the senator wants to help prevent accidents of this type, the building codes for schools, parks and playgrounds would be the place to start. I would suggest the following:
1) Flagpoles with traditional exterior halyards only. This would eliminate high maintenance costs, require parts that are of less weight, and remove the need for a counter weight which are nortorious for falling.
2) Require flagpoles to exceed the NAAMN specifications by 25% or more as a safty factor.
3) Require flagpoles to placed away from areas of pedestrian traffic by 1.5 times the exposed height of the flagpole.
Then require these places to:
1) Perform regular inspections and maintenance of flagpoles.
2) Restrict children from hoisting a flag on flagpoles that are not inspected on a regular basis. This should include inspections after storms.
3) Restrict children from hoisting a flag on flagpoles during high winds, etc.