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.
Read More
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.
Read More
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.
Read More
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.
Read More
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.
Read More
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.
Read More
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.
Read More
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.
Read More
Not every problem at a live event is a major incident. Learn how NIMS and OSHA define incidents, how to classify them correctly, and when to escalate your response—before you need to.
Read More
A major incident plan is the foundation of event safety. Learn the 15 essential components every live event emergency plan must include, with guidance from NIMS, FEMA, and NFPA 1600.
Read More