The Health & Safety Guide for Film, TV & Theater, Second Edition
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The Health & Safety Guide for Film, TV & Theater, Second Edition

Monona Rossol

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  1. 288 Seiten
  2. English
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eBook - ePub

The Health & Safety Guide for Film, TV & Theater, Second Edition

Monona Rossol

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This second edition has been expanded and updated to address new hazards, unique health and safety problems, and particular regulations that threaten anyone working in the entertainment industries today. Artists' advocate Monona Rossol exposes the hazards of theatrical paints, theatrical makeup, pigments, dyes, plastics, solvents, woodworking, welding, asbestos, fog, and offers practical solutions to these dangers. No one working in the performing arts can afford to skip this handbook packed with life-or-death health and safety information.

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Information

The Way It Is

Before we try to improve safety and health conditions in our business, we should spend a few minutes looking at the entrenched behavior that will need adjusting. Most readers will already be familiar with many of these attitudes and may smile in recognition of some of them.

HASTE: IT DOESN’T HAVE TO BE SAFE, IT HAS TO BE TUESDAY

Rarely, if ever, does this industry allow enough time for any phase of production, from planning to execution. Time is money, and the time spent doing things safely isn’t visible from the audience like a special effect or a new backdrop is. How shortsighted it is to assume that there is no time to do a thing right, but somehow there will be time to do it over.

UNSAFE CONDITIONS: JURY-RIG AND HOPE IT HOLDS

Many venues and shops have bad ventilation systems; unsafe walking surfaces and stairs; outdated, poorly maintained, or unguarded saws and other equipment; poor work lighting; and recycled scenery.
Unsafe venues and shops should be repaired or go dark. Unsafe equipment should be repaired, replaced, or taken out of service. Productions and theater activities should be planned around a facility’s limitations. For example, only shops equipped with spray booths should do spray painting; and shows should accept the artistic challenge to create productions with only limited amounts of scenery, props, or lighting effects if doing otherwise means using unsafe equipment.

BAD ATTITUDES

Macho: It’s Alive, Well, and Living in a Theater

Performers and technicians alike commonly believe that suffering, risk taking, and even dying for art is an appropriate price to pay for the privilege of working in the field. Actors use the stock phrase “The show must go on.” But theater arts are not the equivalent of wilderness survival expeditions; they are a part of the humanities curriculum in many universities. And in the professional theatrical and entertainment industries, no level of casualties is acceptable!
Theatrical amateurs and professionals alike are charged with enlightening and enriching audiences and themselves, not risking the lives and limbs of both. When an effect or stunt is associated with a risk, the risk must be carefully assessed. Risks a professional performer takes must be minimal, calculated, and limited to a minor adverse consequence at worst. Risks to young student performers or to audiences are not acceptable at all.

Horseplay: Only for Horses and Jackasses

Breaking rehearsal tension or keeping up team spirit is not, as some assume, accomplished by permitting horseplay. Horseplay is a well-known cause of injuries and accidents. Directors, producers, supervisors, or shop stewards that permit or encourage horseplay may find themselves and/or their employers liable for any resulting accidents.

Cast Party Mentality: Damn the Strike, the Party’s On

Parties must be scheduled at times that will not encourage workers to rush hazardous activities. This is particularly true of strikes at the end of runs. Strikes combine all the hazardous activities of lighting, rigging, electrical work, and construction at one time. A looming party should not tempt workers to give in to haste and the destructive urges that transform disassembly into demolition.

IMPAIRED JUDGEMENT

Drugs and Alcohol: The Barrymore Mystique

You have to keep your wits about you in this business. Yet many choose to impair their wits by using drugs or alcohol recreationally. Just as these chemicals cause accidents on the highway, they are responsible for accidents in theater as well.

Chemicals in Products: The Hidden Enemy

Besides alcohol and street drugs, other chemicals can cause narcosis and impaired judgement. You may inhale these quite innocently while working with paints, costume cleaning solvents, aerosol spray products, and the like. Whether inhaled accidentally or deliberately (as in glue sniffing), no one should have these chemicals in his or her bloodstream while they work.

Medications

Some people must take medications that impair their judgement and timing, or that may interact with other chemicals they inhale while using paints and other products. People who must use prescribed medications should check with their doctors about such interactions. They also should know whether their medications will affect their ability to operate dangerous machinery, drive, or do other hazardous jobs. Teachers and supervisors should know about the physical condition and limitations of their students or workers before assigning tasks. Privacy rights should not extend to a worker or student’s option to fail to disclose potential medical impairments.

Lack of Sleep or Food: We’ll Stop When We Drop

A common theater practice is to compensate for the lack of sufficient production time by working incredibly long hours. Overwork and lack of proper nourishment impair judgement and awareness and have caused accidents.
In school or community theater, long hours amount to a kind of endurance test given to new people to see if they “can take it” or to prove they are sufficiently “dedicated.” Some teachers rationalize this hazing of students by telling them they are getting a dose of how things are in the “real world.” This is usually done with a vengeance by teachers whose own aspirations have not been realized in that real world.
In any case, a world that allows people to work to a dangerous state of exhaustion should not be emulated. And the best way to correct this problem is to flood the business with educated students and apprentices who know how things should be done and can recognize abuse when they see it.

Psychological Stress

By nature, the theater is a psychologically difficult environment, rife with personal and artistic pressures. However, when additional pressures, such as a tyrannical director or unreasonable job insecurity, are added to this already-difficult environment, stresses may be created that can hamper productions and contribute to poor judgements and accidents.

WORKING ALONE: IT’S 2:00 AM—DO YOU KNOW WHO IS IN YOUR VENUE?

There are pits, electrical equipment, catwalks, toxic chemicals, and a host of deadly hazards in a theater. Never allow anyone to work alone or even remain in a venue alone. Organize “buddy system” work schedules for odd hours.

UNQUALIFIED WORKERS: I’LL TRY ANYTHING ONCE

Actors are so anxious to act, and technicians are so eager to get a job, that they will often claim expertise they do not have. Producers, managers, and directors often are content to let them try. Unqualified technicians put themselves and others at risk if they use rigging, lasers, holography, pyrotechnics, fog and smoke effects, industrial plastics, paints, dyes, and other materials and equipment. Legally, employers can be held liable for the errors of their employees and they are obligated to verify the experience and training of job applicants.

LAWLESSNESS: RULES AND REGS ARE FOR OTHER FOLK

Many people in our business believe that health and safety regulations and laws can be bent or broken because theater and entertainment are “special.” This incorrect idea is bolstered by the fact that authorities often fail to inspect many theaters and entertainment venues and shops, so they may escape penalties for ignoring regulations. Retribution comes if an accident, fire, or incident occurs that brings a facility to authorities’ attention. The liabilities and penalties resulting from ignoring the rules usually more than cancel any benefits.

DON’T COMPLAIN: IT’S NOBODY’S BUSINESS BUT OUR OWN

People who complain about health and safety conditions are called names, the most common of which is “unemployed.” Producers, supervisors, and directors often find it easier to fire the complainer than to investigate and correct the hazards. And the greatest career ender of all is airing safety issues in the courts or in the press. Government agencies claim to protect such whistle-blowers from retaliation, but their records show they usually cannot. The only workable protection for whistleblowers of which I am aware is membership in a local union whose officers regularly make health and safety inspections of theaters and film locations. In this way, only the union knows if someone complained or if the union officers simply found a dangerous condition in a regular visit.

Safety: It’s the Law

Our business is not “special” when it comes to safety. The same occupational laws that apply to any business also apply to us.

OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY RULES

In the United States, the law governing the relationship between employers and employees is called the Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Act. In Canada, the equivalent law is called the Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) Act. Other countries have similar laws. But whatever the country, the purpose of these laws is to protect workers.
For example, the OSHAct general duty clause reads in part that the “employer shall furnish . . . employment and a place of employment which are free from recognized hazards.” The Canadian OHSAct requires employers and supervisors to “take every precaution reasonable in the circumstances for the protection of a worker.” These brief general statements serve as the foundation for complex regulatory structures.

WHICH OSHA IS YOUR OSHA?

The first step to comply with these laws is to find out exactly which laws apply to you. For example, U.S. workers may come under either federal or state OSHA regulations. In Canada, each province and territory has its own set of rules. A copy of the applicable laws can be obtained from federal, state, or provincial departments of labor and should be kept handy for reference.
Most U.S. workers come under the federal OSHA regulations. But some states have their own federally approved state OSHA plans. The state rules usually are similar or even identical to the federal ones, but enforcement is by the state. Such states include Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Virgin Islands, Washington, and Wyoming.
The federally approved state OSHA rules must change whenever new federal standards are adopted. States must adopt comparable standards within six months of the publication date of new federal standards. The protection afforded workers under state rules must be equal to, or better than, the federal standard.

ENFORCEMENT

Workers employed by state theaters or schools that come under a state OSHA plan should be aware that they are in a situation in which one state agency (the state’s OSHA) is enforcing regulations on another state agency (the state theater or school). That sometimes creates a political climate in which the worker’s interests are not strongly defended.
Even worse, there are twenty-five states which have exempted their own state, county, and municipal workers from the federal OSHA regulations without having a federally approved state OSHA to fill the breach. In these states, civic and state theaters and departments of theater and film in state schools and universities are exempt from inspections! In my opinion, this is one reason so many college-educated performers and technicians enter the professional world without a basic understanding of the regulations.
These states are Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Texas, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. Since I have worked in every state in the union except Alabama and North Dakota, it is my experience that I can actually sense a greater general lack of concern about safety issues in these states.
Federal laws are not much better enforced, but for different reasons. Over a number of administrations, Washington has cut OSHAs budget to the point that it is estimated that it would take about a hundred years for OSHAs small staff of inspectors to get even once to each workplace. In general, the only time you are likely to see an OSHA inspector is after a serious accident has occurred, which is too late.
Once the OSHA inspectors have responded to an accident or death, the fines are so small that most businesses find it cheaper to pay them and to continue to ignore the rules. The current head of OSHA, David Michaels, has complained about the fines. He says that for small businesses (including theaters), the fines are usually in the range of $5,900 even if someone is killed!
Workers in theater, film, and TV must protect themselves since employers will not be significantly penalized if they are harmed or killed. Often workers don’t understand that they can’t sue employers even if these employers deliberately put them in harm’s way. Employees lost the right to sue in exchange for workers’ compensation in the early 1900s. Now, no matter whose fault, we have to accept the pittance that compensation provides. In New York, compensation for complete disability is a maximum of $600 per week and a maximum death benefit of $50,000. Realizing no one can live in New York on disability payments or put their kids through college on their death benefits, smart attorneys have sometimes found a way to sue someone—maybe the theater owner, the manufacturer of some equipment involved, or an individual in the crew. But more often than not, this fails. And since the only penalty the employer faces is a slight increase in their insurance rates, there is no financial incentive for employers to keep their workers from harm.
As a case in point, I was retai...

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