Risk Man in Event & Venue Safety Planning
Risk Man in Event & Venue Safety Planning
Risk Man in Event & Venue Safety Planning
Effectively today an organisation must take responsibility for managing all of their assets.
For anyone involved with management of crowds (venue and event ‘assets’) this responsibility
is of critical significance.
There is always a reluctance to implement things that are not clearly understood. Risk
Management is frequently misconstrued. Risk Management is about common sense,
however the problem is that common sense sometimes isn’t all that common.
Risk assessment has always been an inherent component of effective crowd management,
although it is usually haphazardly applied and implemented without due process. On an
international basis the requirement for risk management application is increasingly being
documented for ‘mass gatherings’. For example, the UK Health & Safety Executive
publications, ‘The Event Safety Guide’ & ‘Managing Crowds Safely’ and the Australian
publication ‘Emergency Management Practice – Safe & Healthy Mass Gatherings’ both detail
a requirement to complete a risk assessment at the crowd management planning stage, and
the Danish ‘Rock Festival Safety Report’ details the importance of a risk evaluation. Although
these guidelines outline a range of risk areas to be evaluated few publications address how to
‘do’ a risk assessment. Australia has the only national standard which assures quality of
process. It in effect removes the ‘risk’ of the risk assessment process being compromised or
inadequately completed by precisely detailing the process requirements.
It is notable that Australia already has a formal competency based education and licensing
system for security consultants and officers, and legislation requiring those involved in crowd
management to be licensed security officers. The qualification includes competencies specific
This simple system is valuable to methodically assess event and venue risk. I use it
extensively and would like to help spread its positive benefits. As a system it helps overcome
the blasé groupthink of accepting risks that only warrant review after incidents occur. It takes
away the concept of ‘it’ll be alright on the night’.
The critical point for event safety management planning is to ensure that the Principals don’t
overlook obvious dangers and risks. Machiavelli said ‘people don’t want the truth they just
want comforting’ and we quite often see after a tragedy that many safety processes have
been ignored in a probable act of self-deception, because the people involved have not taken
an independent, methodical approach to identifying and treating risk.
This article attempts to explain the relevance and importance of application of the Risk
Management process specifically to events and venues. It does so by following the process,
step by step.
Identify risks
! What can happen?
! How can it happen?
Analyse Risks
Determine existing controls
Communicate and consult
Determine Determine
likelihood consequences
Monitor and review
Evaluate Risks
! Compare against criteria
! Set risk priorities
YES
Assess risks Accept risks
NO
Treat risks
! Identify treatment options
! Evaluate treatment options
! Select treatment options
! Prepare treatment plans
! Implement plans
The first step is completion of a review of any venue/event (or associated stakeholder)
existing policies / strategies for risk currency & compliance. It involves detailed investigation
of any current risk management system (including risk treatment strategies) and its
compliance with all facets of the Australian Standard 4360: Risk Management. It is
fundamentally an audit approach to existing systems to identify requirements and it is reliant
on extensive research and consultation with all key stakeholders, i.e. This is only as good as
the information you are provided.
IDENTIFICATION OF RISK
Identification of risk is the comprehensive investigation and recognition of all potential risks
associated with venue / event operations and facilities after extensive research and
consultation with all key stakeholders. The ‘everything that can go wrong will go wrong (at
some stage)’ concept.
All aspects of event safety planning must be methodically reviewed for possible risk. It is
widely respected that the UK Health & Safety Executive ‘Event Safety Guide’ covers most
aspects of event safety planning. It however does not adequately address crowd
management, emergency management and operations which support these to be sufficient for
At this stage of the process all risks within the scope should be detailed, not just those
considered likely. For crowd management operations experts in crowd management and
safety should be involved in the risk evaluation process. For events all previous crowd
management problems and infrastructure failures at similar profile events/venues must be
regarded as potential risk. The US Rock Safety Database provide an excellent resource.
Similarity of profile must be broadly considered i.e. ‘err on the safe side’.
ANALYSE RISK
The next stage is evaluation and categorisation of all Identified Risk pertaining to event/venue
operations and facilities. For each risk the likelihood and consequence is estimated and
plotted on a risk matrix. Likelihood is ranked from rare (may occur only in exceptional
circumstances) to almost certain (will occur in most circumstances). Consequence is graded
as minor (able to be dealt with by routine operations) to extreme (threaten the survival of not
only assets, but also the event and the organisations involved).
Consequence # A B C D E
Likelihood $ (Minor) (Medium) (Major) (Critical) (Extreme)
1 Legend
Almost certain
2 LOW
Likely
MEDIUM
3
Possible SERIOUS
4
Unlikely HIGH
5
Rare
Eg. For outdoor music events the serious and extreme risks could be:
% Financial failure – not enough patrons.
% Crowd crush / crowd control problems.
% Ingress or egress difficulties.
% Depending on acts / programming / venue and security.
% Stage collapse or structural collapse.
% Severe weather conditions forcing cancellation.
EVALUATION OF RISK
The analysed risks are evaluated and risk priorities established based on individual
stakeholder analysis balanced by specialist expertise where relevant. Risk is graded into a
checklist of low / medium / serious and high risks (the grading is based on combinations of
likelihood and consequence detailed within the risk matrix diagram). The ‘as low as
reasonably possible ‘ rule must be applied to all serious and high risk.
Eg: To focus on crowd crush risk, with parameters of: an outdoor festival; GA (general
admission) ticketing; 30,000 plus patrons; all headline acts on main stage; a flat area in front
of stage; single barricade system in place. Evaluation will conclude that the majority of the
crowd will push toward stage front during headline performances.
Obviously there are many other factors which may contribute toward a possible crowd surge
forwards to stage front, including; crowd expectations; historical behavioural patterns; stage
sightlines; height of stage; type of performance; artist contribution to crowd energy, activities
and hysteria; level of common interest of crowd; tendency of crowd to develop group
behaviour etc etc. However whatever the contributing causes are, the desired outcome is to
prevent a life threatening crush. The evaluation of the risk for a crowd crush is a ‘possible’
likelihood with ‘critical’ consequences, or a 3D rating. On the matrix we see that ‘crowd crush’
is a ‘high’ or ‘serious’ grade risk.
TREAT RISKS
All stakeholders must assess the risks identified and their evaluation and decide whether to
accept and treat the risks or review operations and remove risk. The applicable treatment
options must be identified and evaluated and a treatment selected.
At this stage event and venue stakeholders commence planning strategies to minimise
exposure to likely risk. Low and medium risk can usually be dealt with operationally and can
be accepted or transferred. High and extreme risks must either be mitigated or avoided.
For crowd management related activities treatment must ensure the safety of ‘human assets’.
All risks that propose potential harm to ‘human’ assets must have detailed plans to preserve
the asset. I.e. all potential threats are avoided.
Eg. Returning to our focus example, the treatment requires a prevention method to stop the
crowd crush (ie avoiding the risk), remembering that a crowd of 30,000 patrons has high
potential threatening forces. In simple terms the crowd density must be controlled to ensure
‘dynamic human forces’ do not place life threatening crush pressure on patrons if the crowd
moves, collapses or tramples a patron. The recommended density is 0.46 people per square
meter. As the only way to control density and reduce the potential forces of a large crowd (for
the example parameters) is by crowd segmentation using barricades to compartmentalise the
crowd into smaller portions of 3,000 to 5,000 pax, the treatment schedule must specify this
requirement.
The treatment also requires that the crowd segmentation is maintained under all possible risk
scenarios. It therefore must be a double Mojo style self anchoring system, requiring 1 security
The treatment will also be noted for all potential crowd injuries as it also allows security and
medical to be much closer to the crowd, throughout the crowd.
Treatment methods for entertainment events are generally insurable due to specialized
entertainment insurance. Contracting specialist or risk areas out to contractors with the legal
liability may also mitigate most risk.
It is at this stage the contractual limitations of risk behaviour by contracted parties involved in
crowd safety management (security/crowd management consultants, traffic management
consultants, security providers, infrastructure suppliers etc) or contributing to crowd
degeneration (FOH staff and service suppliers, bands or performers, alcohol licensees etc) or
unsafe crowd environments (staging, technical and infrastructure suppliers, venues), becomes
significant.
Removal or transfer of liability however is not appropriate for risk to human/public safety. No
contractor should be prepared to accept plans from promoters (or other stakeholders) that do
not adequately mitigate damage or loss to human resources. Far too frequently those
contractually charged with public safety accept liability hand in hand with profitability. For this
reason entertainment crowd management failures continue to propose a threat to human life.
For crowd management the application of Risk Management involving crowd management
security contractors during the event/venue planning process should be:
1. Risk Assessment by Qualified Assessor submitted to security consultant.
2. Security Consultant – prepares treatment schedule and plan.
3. Security / licensed consultant implements treatment solutions.
4. Risk treatment operational solutions are closely monitored for compliance with plans.
5. A post event Risk Review is undertaken and strategies for treatment of emerging risk
documented.
The risk process is a simple system to focus on the possibility and impact of possible risks.
The process is best done by an independent outside assessor to avoid a blasé attitude or
acceptance of risk considered as part of the industry.
The role of risk management will increase as the rationalization of the insurance industry
continues in the wake of recent Australian and International occurrences. Risk Management
will be become a tool for insurance brokers to ensure a viable relationship between insurance
companies and clients and their stakeholders.
Insurable or not, those charged with public safety should pro-actively implement risk
management in everything they do. As life safety has not proven to be sufficient incentive to
remove crowd safety risk, the rapidly approaching December 15 criminal penalty legislation
within Australia should.