Outdoor Event Safety | Why Cancelling Was the Right Decision
When severe weather threatens an outdoor event, here's why safety should always come before commercial pressure.

Sometimes the Best Event Decision Is the One That Doesn't Happen
One of the hardest parts of working in live events isn't designing incredible experiences or solving technical challenges.
It's making the call that nobody wants to make.
Recently, our team was preparing for an outdoor event. The equipment was packed, the crew was ready, and everyone involved wanted the event to proceed. Unfortunately, the weather had other ideas.
Like many event professionals, we've spent years developing comprehensive Safe Work Method Statements (SWMS), risk assessments, emergency procedures and operating policies. They aren't documents created to satisfy paperwork requirements, they exist to guide decisions when circumstances become difficult.
As the rain intensified, our team assessed the conditions against those documented safety controls. The conclusion was clear: proceeding with the event would introduce unacceptable risks.
It wasn't the decision anyone wanted.
Not the client.
Not our crew.
Not us.
Because cancelling or postponing an event carries real consequences. It affects budgets, disrupts carefully laid plans, disappoints attendees, and sidelines the countless hours invested by clients, suppliers and crew alike.
But there is something more important than all of that.
People.
Safety Isn't a Commercial Decision
One of the greatest risks in any project is allowing commercial pressure to influence safety decisions. When significant money has been invested, emotions naturally run high. Everyone wants to find a way to make it work.
That's exactly why robust safety systems exist.
Good documentation removes emotion from decision-making.
A well-prepared risk assessment doesn't ask whether cancelling will upset a client.
A safety management plan doesn't calculate the financial impact of postponing an event.
It asks a much simpler question: Can this activity be carried out safely?
If the answer is no, the decision has already been made.
Good Documentation Protects Everyone
Over the years we've invested significant time developing our safety systems. Not because we expected to use them every week. But because when difficult situations arise, they provide clarity.
Clear procedures protect:
- our crew
- our clients
- contractors
- performers
- venue staff
- members of the public
Most importantly, they ensure decisions are made consistently, rather than emotionally.
Values Are Revealed When They're Tested
It's easy to talk about safety when the sun is shining. It's much harder when enforcing your safety obligations might cost you a client.
Every business reaches moments where its values are tested.
For us, today reinforced something we've always believed: Integrity means doing the right thing, even when it's commercially uncomfortable.
If we ever have to choose between protecting a relationship and protecting people's safety, we'll choose safety every time.
We genuinely hope our clients never need to question that. Because if they're trusting us to deliver their event, they should also be able to trust us to know when it isn't safe to proceed.
Looking Beyond One Event
No event is worth someone getting hurt.
Not a conference.
Not a festival.
Not a community celebration.
Not a brand activation.
At Eventspec, we believe that delivering great events isn't just about production. It's about exercising sound judgement, protecting the people involved, and having the courage to make the difficult decisions when they matter most.
Our job isn't just to deliver exceptional events. It's to know when not to.
Because at the end of the day, events can be rescheduled.
People can't.

























