


stephane wrote:I went to Homelands 2 or 3 years ago, I think it was 3 years.Sitting down on their own near one of the tent, in plain view was a couple (25-30yo) blattantly sniffing coke (or other white powder) of a mirror. 2 uniformed police officer walked next to them, clearly saw what was happening and turned a blind eye to it (not even a "please try to be a bit more discreet").
So it's quite hard to beleive that any security will ever loose is badge for "not having seen" someone taking drugs at a festival.

tavdy79 wrote:Taloen Loch wrote:scranner wrote:security wrote:
We dont make the rules up and have to work to strict guidelines with the new SIA badge which all of work under. Just lets say that you walk by me and you decide to take a big line of coke in front of me and i ignore it and theres a undercover police officer that sees me ignore it and not deal with it.
I would lose my door badge and would not be able to work again for anything upto 10 years and all because you or whoever wants to take drugs openly.
you really think undercover OB would have the time to do that? they would be more likely more concerned with the drugs than who is the security?
and how can they prove you didnt see rarther than turned a blind eye.
But why should security take that risk on another's behalf?
That being precisely the reason why any security personnel with even an ounce of common sense are going to avoid situations where they're likely to have to deal with drug use - if they see and ignore it, they risk losing their license; if they see it and come down heavy (as Shadow did) they risk causing violent confrontations - in contravention of their contract!

Taloen Loch wrote:tavdy79 wrote:That being precisely the reason why any security personnel with even an ounce of common sense are going to avoid situations where they're likely to have to deal with drug use - if they see and ignore it, they risk losing their license; if they see it and come down heavy (as Shadow did) they risk causing violent confrontations - in contravention of their contract!
How are they supposed to avoid such situations at a festival? Stay in their tents? Walk around with their eyes closed and their fingers in their ears? Wear flashing lights and bells so that everyone will know when they're coming?
By all means say they shouldn't act in a way that will make the situation worse but you can't seriously suggest that it would be so easy to avoid dealing with drug use at a festival. Especially one like Glade.

tavdy79 wrote:From memory, the extra security was brought in to deal with fencejumping and theft. I certainly didn't expect to see them around the site as much as I did, since the logical assumption would be that fewer fencejumpers = lower theft. I.E. the security should be concentrating on keeping fencejumpers out, not chasing around after them once they're already inside. Plus, I think we all agree that Security shouldn't be explicitly going looking for drug use - which they clearly were. If they see drugs being used or sold while doing something else, that's fine - any person they catch should have been more careful - but actively searching out drug use is asking for trouble. I was under the impression their job was to prevent trouble, not cause it.

tavdy79 wrote:Taloen Loch wrote:tavdy79 wrote:That being precisely the reason why any security personnel with even an ounce of common sense are going to avoid situations where they're likely to have to deal with drug use - if they see and ignore it, they risk losing their license; if they see it and come down heavy (as Shadow did) they risk causing violent confrontations - in contravention of their contract!
How are they supposed to avoid such situations at a festival? Stay in their tents? Walk around with their eyes closed and their fingers in their ears? Wear flashing lights and bells so that everyone will know when they're coming?
By all means say they shouldn't act in a way that will make the situation worse but you can't seriously suggest that it would be so easy to avoid dealing with drug use at a festival. Especially one like Glade.
From memory, the extra security was brought in to deal with fencejumping and theft. I certainly didn't expect to see them around the site as much as I did, since the logical assumption would be that fewer fencejumpers = lower theft. I.E. the security should be concentrating on keeping fencejumpers out, not chasing around after them once they're already inside. Plus, I think we all agree that Security shouldn't be explicitly going looking for drug use - which they clearly were. If they see drugs being used or sold while doing something else, that's fine - any person they catch should have been more careful - but actively searching out drug use is asking for trouble. I was under the impression their job was to prevent trouble, not cause it.
security wrote:We dont make the rules up and have to work to strict guidelines with the new SIA badge which all of work under. Just lets say that you walk by me and you decide to take a big line of coke in front of me and i ignore it and theres a undercover police officer that sees me ignore it and not deal with it.
I would lose my door badge and would not be able to work again for anything upto 10 years and all because you or whoever wants to take drugs openly.
scranner wrote:you really think undercover OB would have the time to do that? they would be more likely more concerned with the drugs than who is the security?
and how can they prove you didnt see rarther than turned a blind eye.
Taloen Loch wrote:But why should security take that risk on another's behalf?
tavdy79 wrote:That being precisely the reason why any security personnel with even an ounce of common sense are going to avoid situations where they're likely to have to deal with drug use - if they see and ignore it, they risk losing their license; if they see it and come down heavy (as Shadow did) they risk causing violent confrontations - in contravention of their contract! Pacifism is a fairly strong zeitgeist element at Glade - I wonder what would have happened if they'd acted like that at other festivals, where that's not the case? I greatly doubt the security companies would have been able to cope if they'd started a major incident - beyond a certain point, sheer force of numbers will outweigh virtually enything.

Taloen Loch wrote:The point is that we can't expect security to ignore drug use if there is a chance of him losing his licence after being spotted doing so by a police officer. Suggesting he can just avoid such situations is disingenuous. Suggesting that they stick to monitoring fence jumping I agree with but I think that was more the fault of the organisers than that of the security companies for it seems unlikely that there could be such a huge security presence within the festival walls had it not been done with the consent of those in charge of the event.


Taloen Loch wrote:But that's dependent upon a specific officer surely? It's certainly not normal policy for the police to see Class A drugs being used without intervening. You can't expect security to not step in because once upon a time you saw a policeman not care and you've illogically extrapolated that to the point where you now believe no policeman will care.
Ridiculous.

Bigby wrote:Taloen Loch wrote:But that's dependent upon a specific officer surely? It's certainly not normal policy for the police to see Class A drugs being used without intervening. You can't expect security to not step in because once upon a time you saw a policeman not care and you've illogically extrapolated that to the point where you now believe no policeman will care.
Ridiculous.
She wasnt saying it was normal policy mate, just that its possible.
DeepBreathes.
stephane wrote:...it's quite hard to beleive that any security will ever loose is badge for "not having seen" someone taking drugs at a festival

Slypsy wrote:Taloen Loch wrote:The point is that we can't expect security to ignore drug use if there is a chance of him losing his licence after being spotted doing so by a police officer. Suggesting he can just avoid such situations is disingenuous. Suggesting that they stick to monitoring fence jumping I agree with but I think that was more the fault of the organisers than that of the security companies for it seems unlikely that there could be such a huge security presence within the festival walls had it not been done with the consent of those in charge of the event.
How could they lose their licence by being seen to let drug taking occur by police when there were no police on site? They could have changed their tactics if police came on site, something they should be aware of as they were monitoring the gate.



Bigby wrote:...just like the paranoi that made you think udercover plod were there...

you should've seen the initial draft - it was all over the shop
But thank you - and welcome to the board
sarahtonin wrote:oh come on, tavdy's post was way more eloquent, lucid and succinct.
sarahtonin wrote:and bigby, i thought u might have been old bill when u said u were 6'6"![]()
how did I miss that fact? I like a man you can climb
Can we start calling him Bigboy instead?Lady_Jane wrote:sarahtonin wrote:and bigby, i thought u might have been old bill when u said u were 6'6"![]()
how did I miss that fact? I like a man you can climb
Can we start calling him Bigboy instead?


Lady_Jane wrote:sarahtonin wrote:and bigby, i thought u might have been old bill when u said u were 6'6"![]()
how did I miss that fact? I like a man you can climb
Can we start calling him Bigboy instead?


Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests