2:00pm - 3:15pm The 10 Commandments Of Live Event Safety
Co-Moderator - John Brown, Brown United
The panelists, with the help of the likes of Red Light Management’s Stuart Ross, have formed the Event Safety Alliance and put together a simple, three-page paper on event safety, which was distributed around the room. Although the panelists made a point of not addressing specific events of the past summer, such as the Indiana State Fair stage collapse, those loomed large.
Some quick highlights: On wind, “A specified individual responsible for monitoring on site conditions and forecasted conditions must be identified prior to event.”
On cancellation, “The roof owner, Production Manager, Promoter or state/local authorities can make the final decision to suspend the event if the
“These three pages, they look like nothing,” attorney Steve Adelman said. “But it’s important to understand what it is and what it is intended to
There has to be a plan for all the foreseeable hazards that may occur at the venue, and the first two pages guide the reader through it. “The second part, on page three, is the part that I as an attorney am fascinated with, which is the responsibility for suspension or cancellation of an event. … It is an attempt to give you guidance, to help you ask the questions about who would be responsible for dealing with an emergency that you have identified by the plan.”
“When the lawyer is telling you that, you ought to take it seriously,” Adelman said. “I do fine with risk management. That puts food on my table. But the real money for lawyers is litigation. So if you want me to have a nicer car or send my daughter to a better private school, do nothing.” The paper is available at www.event-safetyalliance.org. | |