KenH wrote:Doesn't surprise me. My wife phoned the club twice to ask for details etc to book a children's birthday party, but never got the promised call-backs.
Keith wrote: As for the rails, I must admit even before I became disabled I thought it was odd that we didn't have grab rails, if someone fell at the end of the game when lots of people leaving together, they could create a domino affect. It would be an interesting Health & Safety Risk Assessment that suggests rails aren't required.
The Wheatley Committee
The Wheatley Committee was set up in 1972 in response to a large number of spectators who had died in a disaster at Ibrox Park, Glasgow. This was the result of structural failure, the steel barriers on stairway 13 gave way and a total of sixty-six people were suffocated to death and many more injured in the resulting crush. Following the recommendations of this committee the Safety of Sports Grounds Act 1975 came on the statute books. Up to then there was no statute about sports grounds as such, though building regulations had references to specific buildings. Accidents at sports venues were dealt with on the basis of common law principles about occupiers and their visitors.
George Dawes wrote:there is a reason why you don't seem to see hand rails on some staircases at football grounds in the ukThe Wheatley Committee
The Wheatley Committee was set up in 1972 in response to a large number of spectators who had died in a disaster at Ibrox Park, Glasgow. This was the result of structural failure, the steel barriers on stairway 13 gave way and a total of sixty-six people were suffocated to death and many more injured in the resulting crush. Following the recommendations of this committee the Safety of Sports Grounds Act 1975 came on the statute books. Up to then there was no statute about sports grounds as such, though building regulations had references to specific buildings. Accidents at sports venues were dealt with on the basis of common law principles about occupiers and their visitors.
-> https://www.firesafe.org.uk/fire-safety ... of-sports/
Keith wrote:Someone should tell Wembley!
The Ibrox situation was entirely different.
George Dawes wrote:No it isn't! People can still get crushed! what I a fight broke out causing a stampede or if somebody fell over at the end over the match with people landing on each other like mini Hysel?
MFC can not just get some random bloke out of the local newspaper and put up hand rails willynilly, they have to go down the proper channels, and approval.
-> http://www.safetyatsportsgrounds.org.uk ... -guide.pdf
Keith wrote:George Dawes wrote:No it isn't! People can still get crushed! what I a fight broke out causing a stampede or if somebody fell over at the end over the match with people landing on each other like mini Hysel?
MFC can not just get some random bloke out of the local newspaper and put up hand rails willynilly, they have to go down the proper channels, and approval.
-> http://www.safetyatsportsgrounds.org.uk ... -guide.pdf
So you are saying Wembley is wrong? Because you can quite clearly see hand rails in the photo!
What if people fall over? Surely they are less likely to fall over if they have a rail (like they have at Wembley!) Someone is more likely to fall over if there isn't a rail.
As for your comment that Ibrox isn't different, that's just a dumb comment! This was a standing area, no seats. The rails were to keep masses of fans in 'funnels', so when a rail collapsed, one funnel spilled in to the next, which caused the crush. Are you seriously saying that a hand rail such as the ones at Wembley would make a riot more likely or more damaging?
[edit:] PS Your link doesn't work.
Keith wrote:
As for your comment that Ibrox isn't different, that's just a dumb comment! This was a standing area, no seats. The rails were to keep masses of fans in 'funnels', so when a rail collapsed, one funnel spilled in to the next, which caused the crush. Are you seriously saying that a hand rail such as the ones at Wembley would make a riot more likely or more damaging?
.
. The 1971 Ibrox disaster was a crush among the crowd at an Old Firm football game, which led to 66 deaths and more than 200 injuries. It happened on 2 January 1971 in an exit stairway at Ibrox Park (now Ibrox Stadium) in Glasgow, Scotland. It was the worst British football disaster until the Hillsborough disaster in Sheffield, England, in 1989.
Keith wrote:[edit:] PS Your link doesn't work.
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