Event Safety, Risk Assessments, UK compliance and Safety Documents

It Was Never a Stampede: The Deadly Physics of Human Crowds

45 min · Gisteren
aflevering It Was Never a Stampede: The Deadly Physics of Human Crowds artwork

Beschrijving

Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2501851/fan_mail/new] The difference between a safe exit and a tragedy is arithmetic. This episode walks through Introduction to Crowd Science by Prof G. Keith Still: why 'stampede' and 'panic' are words that blame the victims, why crowd disasters are system failures built in months before the gates open, and why the tools that actually save lives are a map, a clicker and a piece of string. We cover the body ellipse and the five people per square metre ceiling, shockwaves and compressive asphyxia, Hillsborough and the Love Parade, RAMP analysis and the DIM-ICE model, the CCTV illusion that fools control rooms, and the 80 per cent rule behind London's New Year fireworks. Plus the one variable no simulation on earth has a line of code for: a police horse. Correction: in the episode we describe simulation software allowing digital crowds to pack at 6.25 people per square metre, beyond the danger threshold. Prof Still's point is the reverse. Grid-based simulations cap packing at 6.25 people per square metre, while real crowds reach crushing pressure at 7 to 10. The software cannot reach the densities that kill, so it can never show you the risk. The conclusion stands, and is stronger for the fix: treat simulation outputs with expert care. Order the book: Introduction to Crowd Science, G. Keith Still (CRC Press): https://www.routledge.com/Introduction-to-Crowd-Science/Still/p/book/9781466579644 [https://www.routledge.com/Introduction-to-Crowd-Science/Still/p/book/9781466579644]

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22 afleveringen

aflevering It Was Never a Stampede: The Deadly Physics of Human Crowds artwork

It Was Never a Stampede: The Deadly Physics of Human Crowds

Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2501851/fan_mail/new] The difference between a safe exit and a tragedy is arithmetic. This episode walks through Introduction to Crowd Science by Prof G. Keith Still: why 'stampede' and 'panic' are words that blame the victims, why crowd disasters are system failures built in months before the gates open, and why the tools that actually save lives are a map, a clicker and a piece of string. We cover the body ellipse and the five people per square metre ceiling, shockwaves and compressive asphyxia, Hillsborough and the Love Parade, RAMP analysis and the DIM-ICE model, the CCTV illusion that fools control rooms, and the 80 per cent rule behind London's New Year fireworks. Plus the one variable no simulation on earth has a line of code for: a police horse. Correction: in the episode we describe simulation software allowing digital crowds to pack at 6.25 people per square metre, beyond the danger threshold. Prof Still's point is the reverse. Grid-based simulations cap packing at 6.25 people per square metre, while real crowds reach crushing pressure at 7 to 10. The software cannot reach the densities that kill, so it can never show you the risk. The conclusion stands, and is stronger for the fix: treat simulation outputs with expert care. Order the book: Introduction to Crowd Science, G. Keith Still (CRC Press): https://www.routledge.com/Introduction-to-Crowd-Science/Still/p/book/9781466579644 [https://www.routledge.com/Introduction-to-Crowd-Science/Still/p/book/9781466579644]

Gisteren45 min
aflevering The Ratio Myth: How Many Medics Does Your Event Actually Need? artwork

The Ratio Myth: How Many Medics Does Your Event Actually Need?

Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2501851/fan_mail/new] Most event medical plans still start with a table. Attendance on one axis, first aiders and ambulances on the other. Trace your finger across the grid, write the number down, file the plan. That table is not evidence. It is a group of professionals sitting in a room decades ago making educated guesses, and those guesses ignored almost everything that actually drives injury and illness at an event. In this episode we take the attendance ratio apart and look at what replaces it. What we cover: * Why a low-participation, fully seated event can run a presentation rate as low as 0.01 per 1,000, and why moshing and crowd surfing drive a 10 to 20 fold increase on the same headcount * Temperature, which has one of the highest impacts of any variable factor: expect as much as a 10% rise in presentation rate for every 1°C above 20°C, and a doubling of the rate if free drinking water is not available * Bounded versus unbounded events, crowd density, and the critical density point at around 5 people per square metre, beyond which people cannot reach care and cannot help themselves * The 200 metre rule: a team walking freely covers around 432 metres in four minutes, but in a crowd that collapses to about 216 * Case mix, the five tiers of severity, and why a marathon needs volume while a racecourse needs a trauma-capable team * The transport to hospital rate, the industry's real measure of success, and why under-staffing on the front end drains the local NHS on the back end * Duty of care, the Caparo test and the Bolam test: why "we used the same table everyone else uses" is not a defence * The event to host population ratio, and how a 4,000 person event in a village of 500 can swallow every ambulance in the county The closing question is the one worth sitting with. If every degree above 20°C means as much as 10% more patients, and baseline temperatures keep rising, at what point does the traditional outdoor summer festival become mathematically too expensive to cover in its current form? A note on two figures in this episode. The 8 to 12 presentations per 1,000 figure, and the 15% concussion and 20% fracture rates, apply to horse jump racing and to jockeys, not to equestrian cross country. The manual puts equestrian eventing nearer a PPR of 15 and competitive cross country at 15 to 22. The manual also notes that the true workload in horse racing is closer to a PPR of 50 to 70, because there are 50 to 70 falls per 1,000 race starters and every faller needs assessment; the 8 to 12 figure counts only those actually injured. Separately, the transport to hospital gold standard is under 1%, achieved by the best providers. Under 2% is the target most events should aim for. Full detail is in the accompanying article. Presented by SafetyDocs. Live, synchronised safety documents for venues and event organisers.

Gisteren40 min
aflevering The Invisible Safety Matrix: Navigating the UK Event eGuide artwork

The Invisible Safety Matrix: Navigating the UK Event eGuide

Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2501851/fan_mail/new] Join us for a deep dive into the March 2026 edition of the eGuide, the essential regulatory manual for organising indoor events and exhibitions in UK venues. In this episode, we unpack the comprehensive guidelines established by the AEV, AEO, and ESSA to ensure the safety, compliance, and smooth operation of massive conventions. We explore the critical administrative deadlines, such as the strict 28-day notice period required for complex structures, hazardous activities, and special features. Our discussion covers a wide array of fascinating logistical challenges, from the engineering behind rigging and electrical installations to the strict protocols surrounding medical treatments, adult entertainment, and the use of live animals or drones on the exhibition floor. Whether you are coordinating crowd management, building temporary demountable structures, or ensuring robust safeguarding and accessibility measures for all visitors, this episode breaks down the crucial rules every event professional needs to know to keep the show running safely

22 jun 202650 min
aflevering Navigating the 'Severe' National Threat Level artwork

Navigating the 'Severe' National Threat Level

Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2501851/fan_mail/new] On April 30, 2026, the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre (JTAC) raised the UK National Threat Level from Substantial to SEVERE, indicating that a terrorist attack is highly likely. In this critical episode, we break down what this shift means for businesses, organizations, and the general public. We examine the recent statement from the Head of Counter Terrorism Policing, Laurence Taylor, who highlighted the growing risks driven by both Islamist and Extreme Right-Wing terrorism, alongside an elevated threat to Jewish and Israeli communities. We also guide you through actionable protective security measures, detailing the ProtectUK Risk Management Process—a five-stage approach to identifying, assessing, and treating security vulnerabilities. Listeners will learn about deploying enhanced, temporary security controls using the Menu of Tactical Options (MoTO) during periods of heightened risk and gain crucial insights into recognising five key terrorist attack methodologies, including Marauding Terrorist Attacks (MTA) and Vehicle As a Weapon (VAW). Join us as we discuss how to remain vigilant, implement robust security plans, and stay alert, but not alarmed.

2 mei 202635 min
aflevering Decoding the New Section 27 Statutory Guidance for Martyn's Law artwork

Decoding the New Section 27 Statutory Guidance for Martyn's Law

Send us an email [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2501851/fan_mail/new] Welcome to Martyn’s Law in Focus. In today's episode, we provide an initial deep dive into the newly published statutory guidance issued under Section 27 of the Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025, widely known as Martyn’s Law. With the Home Office releasing this guidance yesterday, we break down what this means for venue operators, event organisers, and compliance teams across England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland. Crucially, we clarify the timeline for compliance. Section 27 has been commenced so the guidance can be published and laid before Parliament, but this does not mean the full operational duties are legally binding right now. The Act achieved Royal Assent on 3 April 2025, and there is an implementation period of at least 24 months. This means the substantive legal requirements will not become mandatory until at least 3 April 2027, giving those in scope vital time to prepare. In this episode, we explore several practical operational rules outlined in the new document. First, we tackle staff training and access to public protection procedures. The guidance is clear: for evacuation, invacuation, lockdown, or communication plans to be effective, staff must know how to enact them rapidly. We discuss how to achieve this through inductions, prompt cards, and briefings, while carefully balancing the need to share information with strict information security. Sensitive details about a venue's vulnerabilities or specific security designs must be strictly controlled on a role-specific basis to prevent them from falling into the wrong hands. We also navigate the complexities of hybrid venues and hired spaces. If you are the individual or organisation with overall control of a building, you remain the "responsible person" and cannot contract out your legal liability to a hirer or third-party service provider. We explain how you should manage this by specifying security duties within hire contracts and monitoring compliance. We also highlight the major exception: if a hirer takes over a space within a standard tier venue to host a "qualifying event" (where 800 or more people are expected and specific entry checks are in place), the hirer becomes the responsible person for that specific event, requiring both parties to co-ordinate their safety procedures. GUIDE IS HERE [https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/69d7c1ff4abe5b6c5ddf26c9/Web_accessible_PDF_-_Terrorism__Protection_of_Premises__Act_2025_Stat_Guidance.pdf] Important Disclaimer: We are not legal experts, and this episode is intended purely as an initial conversation about the newly released guidance to help our listeners start thinking about preparedness. The statutory guidance clearly states that every qualifying premises and event will be unique. We may have misunderstood some of the directions, and this discussion does not replace official legal or regulatory advice. It is the listener's responsibility to study the statutory requirements and assess how the legal framework applies to their specific circumstances. You must take your regulatory and compliance advice directly from the official regulator, the Security Industry Authority (SIA), and not from us.

16 apr 202642 min