Hazard identification is the first step in any credible event emergency plan. Explore the 14-category hazard framework and learn how to apply it systematically to your event using FEMA, ISO 45001, and NFPA 1600 guidance.
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Effective event safety requires coordinating police, fire, EMS, and local government before an incident occurs. Learn the multi-agency planning framework, role definitions, and NIMS coordination requirements for live events.
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When a major incident occurs at your event, public safety will respond using NIMS and ICS. Here is what every event organizer needs to know about these systems—before you need them.
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The decision to stop or evacuate a live event is one of the most consequential an organizer can make. Learn the protocols, who holds authority, and what NIMS, OSHA, and NFPA 101 require your plan to say.
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A bomb threat at a live event demands a calm, pre-planned response. Learn the documented protocol, who holds evacuation authority, and what DHS, FBI, OSHA, and NIMS require your staff to know.
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Every patron with a phone is a potential news reporter. Learn how to manage media and social media during a live event emergency, from pre-event PIO appointment to post-incident communication.
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After a major incident at a live event, how you manage the scene affects safety outcomes, legal proceedings, and accountability. Learn cordon protocols and evidence preservation requirements under NIMS, OSHA, and NFPA 1600.
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A major incident plan is only as good as the people implementing it. Learn how HSEEP tabletop exercises and OSHA-compliant staff training close the gap between a written plan and a competent response.
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Fire codes emerged from tragedy. Learn how the IFC, NFPA 1, and model building codes work, who enforces them, and what compliance requires of live event organizers — with lessons from the Cocoanut Grove, Beverly Hills Supper Club, and Station nightclub fires.
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Fire safety codes use precise technical vocabulary. This working glossary defines the key terms event organizers encounter — means of egress, occupant load, panic hardware, area of refuge, fire watch, and more — with citations to NFPA 101 and the IFC.
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