This Code of Conduct was reviewed and updated on July 4, 2025.
ROLLERCON CODE OF CONDUCT
RollerCon takes the safety and well-being of our community very seriously and does not allow or tolerate the harassment of or by any employee, volunteer, coach, attendee, vendor, volunteer, or other affiliated persons at our event. Reports against any person affiliated with RollerCon during the event will be taken seriously.
DEFINITIONS:
Examples of prohibited conduct may include, but are not limited to:
- Intimidation or threats
- Inappropriate disruption of events
- Physical assault of any type
- Inappropriate physical contact
- Unwanted sexual attention
- Unwanted photography or video recording
- Bullying or stalking
Especially in connection to:
- Race, ethnicity or national origin
- Gender identity or presentation
- Sex or sexual orientation
- Disability, medical condition or pregnancy
- Age
- Religion
- Citizenship status
- Attire (or lack of it)
- Skill level or lack of it
Persons affiliated with RollerCon are expected to conduct themselves in a responsible and respectful manner at RollerCon. This includes:
Respect RollerCon and host venue safety rules.
Comply with local laws, hotel security and law enforcement as well as RollerCon SkateSafe and Management staff and Venue Security instructions at all times.
Never assume personal comments about a person are appropriate or welcome.
Never assume physical contact with another is appropriate or welcomed without explicit consent.
Request and respect people’s physical boundaries.
Attendees are free to dress however they choose, including revealing outfits in private RollerCon convention areas, but must comply with venue policies about nudity and municipal indecent exposure laws. Expo forbids toplessness. City laws require that you cover anus and genitals.
Consent must be explicit and ongoing.
Nudity is not consent. Clothing, lack of clothing and/or a person’s appearance is never considered consent.
Fame is not consent. Do not touch coaches or other famous people without explicit consent.
Intoxicated people cannot legally give consent.