The night the city became a stadium [electronic resource] : independent review of the 2011 Vancouver Stanley Cup playoffs riot / Co-Chairs: John Furlong and Douglas J. Keefe.
Record details
- Physical Description: 1 electronic text ([396] p.) : ill. (some col.), digital file.
- Publisher: Victoria, B.C. : Government of British Columbia, c2011
Content descriptions
General Note: | "August 31, 2011". Issued as part of the desLibris documents collection. |
Bibliography, etc. Note: | Includes bibliographic references. |
Formatted Contents Note: | Executive summary -- Introduction -- A positive anxiety for the Canucks -- Aftermath -- Mandate of this review -- Our role -- Assigning blame -- Cause, learning & improvement -- Why a review? -- A two-month independent process -- The Stanley Cup riot -- A word of thanks -- A narrative account of the riot -- Introduction -- Game day -- Indications of trouble -- Fires set and the riot is on -- 1. Learnings from 1994 -- 1.1. The events of June 14, 1994 -- 1.2. The lessons from June 14, 1994 -- 1.2.1. Operational planning -- 1.2.2. Communications -- 1.2.3. Command -- 1.2.4. Deployment and tactics -- 1.2.5. Equipment -- 1.2.6. Training -- 1.2.7. The role of alcohol -- 1.2.8. Special event planning -- 1.2.9. Other findings --1.3. Summary and conclusions -- 2. VPD and city plans and what transpired -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. Event planning structure at city -- 2.3. Findings -- 2.3.1. Summary -- 2.4. Police planning -- 2.4.1. Did the VPD have the resources it thought were required for game 7?-- 2.4.2. Revealing the number of police -- 2.4.3. The number -- 2.4.4. Comparable numbers -- 2.4.5. Game 7: predicting the crowd -- 2.4.6. Finding -- 2.4.7. Was this foreseeable? -- 2.4.8. Finding: not beyond imagining -- 2.4.9. Adaptation to changing conditions -- 2.4.10. Recommendation -- 2.5. Police response to riotous behavior -- 2.5.1. Could the riot have been suppressed through earlier and firmer intervention by police? -- 2.5.2. Finding -- 2.5.3. Transition from riot prevention to riot suppression -- 2.5.4. Command confusion -- 2.5.5. Findings -- 2.5.6. Recommendations -- 2.5.7. Recommendation -- 2.5.8. Communication with crowd -- 2.5.9. Recommendation -- 2.6. A regional riot -- 2.6.1. The structure of policing -- 2.6.2. Finding -- 2.6.3. Recommendations -- 2.7. Regional public safety infrastructure -- 2.7.1. E-Comm -- 2.7.2. Recommendation -- 2.7.3. EOC -- 2.7.4. Finding -- 2.7.5. Recommendation -- 2.8. Regional events -- 2.8.1. Recommendation -- 2.8.2. Police governance -- 2.8.3. Recommendation -- 3. Alcohol -- 3.1. Alcohol on the night of game 7 -- 3.1.1. Overview -- 3.1.2. 1994 B.C. Police Commission alcohol recommendations -- 3.1.3. Alcohol use and misuse -- 3.1.4. Alcohol at large public events -- 3.1.5. Recommendations -- 4. A framework for the future -- 4.1. When the city becomes a stadium -- 4.1.1. Reflections on the stadium effect of June 15 -- 4.1.2. Recommendations -- 4.2. The volunteer factor -- 4.2.1. An event stadium without controls -- 4.2.2. We have what it takes -- 4.2.3. Another example -- 4.2.4. A volunteer program for large regional events -- 4.2.5. Recommendations -- 4.3. Justice for the community -- 4.3.1. Another riot -- 4.3.2. The harm that's been done -- 4.3.3. A restorative response to a riot -- 4.3.4. An apology is not good enough and neither is a conviction -- 4.3.5. Learning lessons -- 4.3.6. What is Restorative Justice? -- 4.3.7. Designing a process -- 4.3.8. A criminal record -- 4.3.9. Recommendations -- 4.4. Social media and the riot -- 4.4.1. A tool for planning, an influencer of crowd behaviour -- 4.4.2. Capturing and sharing digital content -- 4.4.3. Intelligence-gathering tool -- 4.4.4. Public safety through social media -- 4.4.5. Recommendation -- 4.5. "We are all Canucks" -- 4.5.1. Team background -- 4.5.2. "Will this be the year?" -- 4.5.3. What could have changed the outcome? -- 4.5.4. Response of the team organization -- 4.5.5. Responsibilities of the National Hockey League -- 4.5.6. Recommendations -- 4.6. Assessing the role of media -- 4.6.1. Predicting "1994 again" -- 4.6.2. A line between sponsorship and reporting -- 4.6.3. Evolution of media -- 4.6.4. Recommendations -- 4.7. TransLink -- 4.7.1. The role of TransLink on game night -- 4.7.2. The system at a glance -- 4.7.3. Transit police -- 4.7.4. 1994 recommendations -- 4.7.5. Recommendations -- Appendix -- A. Summary of the 2011 Riot Review recommendations -- Section 2: VPD and city plans and what transpired -- Section 3: Alcohol -- Section 4: A framework for the future -- B. The 1994 recommendations -- C. Review methodology -- On-site visits -- Interviews, meetings, and forums -- Review of key documents -- Review of the literature on crowd psychology and the policing of crowds -- Emergency Workers Response Survey -- Submissions from the general public -- D. News releases about the Riot Review -- E. Notes on the public submissions -- General remarks -- Individuals & organizations -- Policing issues -- City of Vancouver and the Lower Mainland -- The role of alcohol -- Riots -- The Riot Review -- F. Mandates of major contributors to the report -- G. Emergency response workers survey -- H. Crowd psychology and the policing of crowds -- Introduction to sports riots -- Which spectators are more likely to riot? -- What factors contribute to riotus behaviour? -- Crowd behaviour -- Implications for policing crowds/ public order policing -- Four principles of crowd policing -- Concluding comment -- References -- I. Chronology of events June 15-16, 2011 -- J. Sports riots -- K. Independent technical review -- L. Event planning -- Notes. |
System Details Note: | Mode of access: World Wide Web. |
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