活动安全如何入手?

 

Planning
The level of detail in your planning should be proportionate to the scale of the event and the degree of risk.

Health and safety management arrangements
First, decide who will help you with your duties as an event organiser.

Whatever the scale of the event, make sure there is a clear understanding within the organising team of who will be responsible for safety matters. For organisations with five or more employees, this is likely to be driven by the company’s health and safety policy. See Write a health and safety policy for your business.

Safety plan
As an event organiser, identify the:

scale, type and scope of the event
type and size of audience
location
duration of the event
time of day and year the event will be held
These factors will help you to determine what resources and facilities will be required.

Translate this information into an appropriate safety plan.

The key tool for creating a safety plan is the process of risk assessment. For information to help with your event risk assessment, see also health and safety topics.

Worker involvement
The best way to protect your employees and visitors from harm and illness is to involve your workers during the planning phase. See consult your employees.

Liaising with others
Liaise with the venue owner / management, emergency services and, where appropriate, local authority Safety Advisory Group for advice and information relevant to your planning. Discuss with them how you can control risks.

Selecting contractors
When you select and appoint contractors, consider their suitability and competence for providing a safe and reliable service.

Ask contractors to:

demonstrate knowledge and understanding of their work and the health and safety hazards involved
provide evidence of a trained workforce and the competence of key staff for the project
confirm that they have sufficient resource levels to do the work
provide evidence of previous successful work that shows they can adopt and develop safe systems of working
In the absence of experience of previous work, ask them to demonstrate an appropriate level of technical ability (eg being a member of an accreditation scheme, professional organisation or trade association may help with this)

Further information
Using contractors: A brief guide
Managing contractors
Providing workplace facilities
Provide the right workplace facilities, including welfare and first aid before works starts

Employee welfare
Emergency planning
Planning for incidents and emergencies
Checklist - Planning for an event
Ask yourself:
Have you decided who will help you with your duties?
Is there a clear understanding within the organising team of who will be responsible for safety matters?
Have you risk assessed your event and prepared a safety plan?
Did you involve your workers during the planning of your event?
Did you liaise with other agencies?
Have you gathered and assessed relevant information to help you determine whether you have selected suitable and competent contractors?
Have you provided the right workplace facilities?
Have you planned for incidents and emergencies?