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November 2001
Marketing
Glowing Overseas
By David Erickson

General
ADDRESSING the IMPACT

COMPUTER EVENT MARKETING ASSOCIATION

CONSIDER, REVIEW, RENEGOTIATE: MEETING DECISIONS AFTER 9/11

Czech It Out

DIAL IN TO YOUR ATTENDEES
Bob Andelman

EXPO TECH EXPO: A BRAVE FIRST STEP
David Erickson

fast facts

Fight the Fear: Free Flights to DMA Show

fyi

Getting Back on Track
Sue Pelletier

GETTING READY FOR CEBIT?
David Erickson

Hope for the Best, Plan for the Worst
By Beth Negus Viveiros

IMARK PICKS UP THE DECORATOR TAB

LEGAL EASE: Force Majeure Takes Center Stage
Jed R. Mandel

Lend a Helping Hand
Bill Gillette

Lessons Learned
By Carey Houston

MPI Survey: Six-Month Outlook

new spaces

ON THE FRONT LINES OF NORMAL
Susan Hatch Editor

one cool idea

one cool idea
David Erickson

ONLINE MEETINGS: NO FLIGHTS REQUIRED
Kevin McDermott

PEOPLE IN THE NEWS

Practically Paperless
By Susan Hatch

Q&A

Safety First
By Megan Rowe

SAN FRAN SUMMIT ON TERROR IMPACT

THE MOTIVATION SHOW: NOT QUITE BUSINESS AS NORMAL
Betsy Bair

The Show Must Go On (line)
By Susan Hatch

TRAINING: Questions to Expect When Bringing in Experts
Janette Racicot

UNCHARTED TERRITORY

WHERE WILL MEETINGS GO FROM HERE?
Bill Gillette

WIRELESS ANAHEIM
Bridget Mintz Testa

www.specialevents.com

 
Article
 
LEGAL EASE: Force Majeure Takes Center Stage

Jed R. Mandel

Technology Meetings, Nov 1, 2001
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The events of September 11, 2001, have dramatically affected the peace of our society. Our nation is joined in an expression of shock, grief, and renewed patriotism. Our day-to-day activities seem small in comparison, but those everyday activities must go on. In this spirit, there is a new appreciation of force majeure provisions in hotel and convention center contracts.

A force majeure or termination provision addresses conditions under which a party may terminate an agreement without liability. Some are better than others. Many mainly protect the hotel or convention center. The language focuses on events that make it “illegal or impossible” for the hotel or facility to “provide facilities or services.” Such provisions are unlikely to allow a group to cancel and terminate its agreement without penalty if, for example, attendees are unwilling or unable to travel. A better force majeure provision would state (emphasis added):

The performance of the agreement by either party is subject to acts of God, war, terrorism, government regulations, disaster, fire, strikes, civil disorder, curtailment of transportation facilities, or other similar cause beyond the control of the parties making it inadvisable, illegal, or impossible to hold the meeting or provide the facility. This agreement may be terminated without penalty for any one or more of such reasons by written notice from one party to the other.

Facing Attrition if You Don't Cancel

Even with strong contracts that make it possible to cancel without penalty, many groups are choosing go ahead with meetings planned for after September 11.

Deciding to press on, however, does not necessarily mean that attendees will fill the room block. Most hotel contracts' attrition clauses impose fees on groups that fail to fill all or a set percentage of their sleeping rooms and, in many cases, food and beverage commitments. Thus, groups that don't cancel are faced with a substantial likelihood of attrition penalties. As has been widely reported, many hotel chains have relaxed or waived cancellation and attrition provisions. However, not all have, and some grace periods are longer than others.

Meeting planners face a Catch-22: Terminate a meeting on the basis of a force majeure provision and leave the hotel empty and without recompense. Or go ahead with the meeting, do the best to fill the room block, and run the risk of attrition fees. Faced with this dilemma, many groups are working with hotels to proceed, but with a written agreement to waive attrition fees. However, not all hotels have been willing to revise the contract.

Future contracts should include language that links attrition and force majeure events, and automatically voids (or substantially modifies) the attrition provision if a force majeure event occurs. With such language, a group could proceed with a meeting with the clear understanding that there would not be an attrition charge, or that such charges would be calculated on a substantially modified basis.

More to Think About

While force majeure provisions and other contract language can address some issues surrounding the impact of extraordinary events, they may not be the only solution. Groups struggle with their own obligations to refund advance registration fees. For some, the bulk of their annual income is linked to the success of a meeting or trade show. For those groups, it is critical to adopt appropriate refund policies and to explore adequate cancellation insurance.

The terrorist attacks have caused us to look at important, but mundane, contract and insurance issues. In doing so, let's not forget the lives forever affected: the victims, their families, friends, and the thousands who toil selflessly to help heal our wounds. Our thoughts and prayers are with them.


Jed R. Mandel is a partner with the Chicago-based law firm of Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg, where he heads the trade and professional association practice. He is a frequent lecturer and writer on meeting-related topics.



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