The process of identifying and analyzing event elements and procedures to increase probability of success and reduce the impact of potential losses.
What is Risk Assessment
100
Prevention and mitigation.
What are the first lines of defense for a safe and healthy event?
100
Level of care based on the circumstances and evidence of the duty to act.
What is Degree?
100
Any occupancy of a building or structure for a gathering of 50 or more people.
What is an Assembly.
100
Two vital techniques for protecting the efficiency of the event manager's due care and diligence.
What are prevention/mitigation and proper monitoring/response?
200
Things never go exactly as planned, can never eliminate all risks and you have no control over changes or incidents that occur.
What is the Fallacy of Control
200
This is relied on in most countries as the foundation for public safety programs for life safety from fire and other emergencies.
What is the National Fire Protection Association's NFPA 101 (Life Safety Code)?
200
The study of workplace equipment design or how to arrange and design devices, machines, or workspace so that people and things interact safely and most efficiently.
What is Ergonomics?
200
These hazards are often hard to recognize because effects may have delayed consequences.
What is Health?
200
The systematic tracking of the status of risks and performance of risk control actions and developing further risk-handling options and actions as needed.
What is Risk Monitoring?
300
The possibility of loss and no possibility of gain.
What is Absolute Risk?
300
Examples include alcohol, broken glass, chemicals, drug usage, insects, rodents, swamps and weather.
What are Public Health Hazards?
300
Initiation, planning and implementation.
What are the 3 primary phases of event management?
300
Contract language or terms under which one party agrees to assume the liability of a second party.
What is a Hold-harmless Agreement?
300
Control potential loss, protection of assets, operate responsibly and minimize legal and financial loss.
What are the Primary Goals of Risk Management?
400
An analytical tool used to detect voids or disparities in the plans for or delivery of an event.
What is Gap Analysis?
400
One of the most critical components of health and hygiene, it's needed for all types of events and can prevent (or cause) sanitation and gastrointestinal issues.
What is Water?
400
Intent, extent and content.
What are the 3 "tents" to the scope of an event?
400
Waste management can impact these 3 primary types of hazards.
What are Health, Safety and Fire?
400
A graphical predictive or diagnostic analytical tool used to explore the root causes of factors that contribute to positive or negative effects or outcomes.
What is Cause/Effect Analysis?
500
Avoidance, reduction, retention, transference, monitoring, control techniques and documentation are all available for identification, analysis, preparation and implementation.
What are examples of Risk Response Options?
500
Sufficient time, training and precautions.
What are the Key Components of On-The-Job Safety?
500
Legal, financial and ethical.
What 3 primary categories of responsibility are event organizers held to in terms of the highest standards?
500
It is concerned with wrongful acts or non-critical duties that allow an injured person to obtain compensation from the person or entity that caused harm or loss.