Happy snaps

May 3, 2013 at 9:48 pm | Posted in Security | Leave a comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Ever keen to improve teen party safety, my team and I have been trying innovative solutions to the gatecrasher plague.

And boy, are we onto a winner!

Fixed cameras are proving to be a cheap, easy yet amazingly effective deterrent for unwanted guests.

Just take a look …

Holding the line

How to form an orderly Kew.

Here we have a 120-guest 18th birthday in Melbourne’s east.

The week before, my grapevine told me a notoriously violent gang was going to hit this party and cause mayhem.

So I advised the host to put the word out on Facebook that this event would be under surveillance.

We also informed Police who, as ever, were very proactive and helpful.

If you look closely, you can see me on the right telling the nice Constable that (for once!) the party was gatecrasher free.

Taking the ‘gate’ out of ‘gatecrasher’

Surprise!

Don’t be scared, this is our Brian – one of the good guys.

He’s inside the party perimeter.

Having checked the park opposite, he’s ensuring no gatecrashers hide behind the fence or burst through the gate to join him.

Imagine their surprise if they’re stupid enough to try!

This was another 18th birthday party, this time for 160 guests.

18 months earlier, an event at this address had been overrun by gatecrashers.

So we informed legitimate guests as they entered to spread the word that the external area of this venue was being recorded.

We pointed our camera at the weak spot the gatecrashers had used last time – a gate leading to a bushy park.

Problem solved!

Modern times

Both these images show the benefits of a fixed camera.

While both events fully expected gatecrashers, not a single one turned up.

Today’s teens are so wired into technology, you need only breathe a word of interest and it runs straight through their world.

If you can’t ‘afford’ professional security, at least get a camera. They cost a few hundred bucks and look like this:

Like a deer in headlights.
(But much better for the deer.)

And if you’re a wannabe gatecrasher keen to wreck an event, my expert crew and I have just one word for you:

SMILE!

:)

Naomi Oakley, Founder, Safe Partying Australia.

Unhappy Halloween

November 2, 2012 at 10:30 pm | Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The face of a party without a plan.

While Western Australia is in election mode, teen parties continue to cause havoc in the community – creating nights more terrifying than any Halloween.

Yet this horror is well within our power to control.

An ounce of prevention …

I’ve always believed a proactive, preventative solution is far better than a passive reaction.

To this end, my proactive legislative solution will ensure parents have the right plans in place, i.e.:

  • Ensure each venue is safe and suitable for a party.
  • Notify police in advance.
  • Have a ratio of 1 responsible adult to every 20 kids.
  • Ensure professional security staff are in place. By this, I don’t mean Uncle Bert or some steroid-pumping neighbour with a security licence.  I mean an expert company with professional liability cover.
  • Ensure all alcohol is managed.

Most teen parties featured in the media have come unstuck due to alcohol being brought onto the property and not managed.

While gatecrashers definitely play a part in causing mayhem, parties with no alcohol control are doomed before they even start.

The bottom line is that no plan invariably equals disaster.

If we fail to control alcohol, the mess these parties make will go on and on – and escalate.

Unless we do something about it.

Permission to party

If more parents were made aware of the links described above, and the reasons for having a party permit system, I believe they’d understand and support the need to apply for a permit to plan, hold and manage these events.

After all, what caring, reasonable parent would not want to ensure their child (and every teen guest) is safe within their party?!

And what kind of parent would not want these children to get home safely after their event?

So that’s the carrot.

Now for the stick.

Courting disaster

If parents aren’t motivated by love, perhaps they’ll respond to fear.

According to this court ruling, parents have been warned they’re at risk of legal action if they fail to properly supervise other people’s children.

This could easily relate to teen parties.

Think about this for a second …

Are you prepared to take such an enormous risk for the sake of your event?

Naomi Oakley, Founder, Safe Partying Australia.

The rise of the ‘hatecrasher’

September 9, 2012 at 2:32 am | Posted in Security | 5 Comments
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Young. Strong. Spiteful. Vicious. Terrifying.

When it comes to gatecrashers, I’ve seen it all. But now I’m witnessing a new level of violence – fuelled by a blind, searing hatred of everyone and everything.

This disturbing shift is so pronounced, I’m calling these intruders ‘hatecrashers’. This word isn’t in any dictionary. But if we don’t do something now to address this turn for the worse, it’s a word that’ll become all too familiar.

Four on the floor

In the last month, my staff and I handled four 16th birthday parties gatecrashed by thugs eager to injure people and damage property. Had we not controlled these events, both would have happened.

Note that these were ‘dry’ events. Hatecrashers even crash parties where alcohol is not available.

School of (very) hard knocks

When kids go gatecrashing, it’s obvious their parents have no idea where they are. I see the same kids cropping up. And I know they go to some prestigious local schools.

These private schools have huge fees … but for what? I wonder what their families would think of their precious boys as ten of them:

  • Smash a gate to splinters.
  • Make a huge racket hammering a back fence.
  • Wake and terrify elderly neighbours by pounding on their metal garage.

I saw them do all this and more.

There goes the neighbourhood

At another party, my crew worked to secure a smashed back fence while hatecrashers pelted them with bottles, garden stakes, log seats and whatever else they could get their hands on.

In most situations, we don’t know if these streetwise thugs have weapons. While we take every precaution, Police back-up is invariably hard to raise on busy weekends.

Neighbours are suffering and becoming extremely distressed. One rang me to say she was home with three young children and too petrified to move. Another neighbour, also too scared to go outside, messaged me to protest the deafening noise and smashed bottles beyond her bedroom window.

Not a parent in sight

The last party had 140 guests and 25 gatecrashers. Five sneaked in via the back while 20 more hit the front. I’m thankful my experienced staff have the expertise to deal with such unpredictable and volatile situations.

Hatecrashers are not shy, skinny types. Most are two metres tall (or more) and seem to have a ready supply of steroids.

They also have backpacks, hoodies and very likely weapons. They abuse security staff, disrespect parents and destroy all property – inside and out.

When the Police finally arrived at this fracas, they stopped some of these kids and called their parents.

Not one parent picked up the phone.

Not one of these modern-day hoods was charged with anything.

Wrong crowd

I know for a fact that two gatecrasher gangs prowl Melbourne’s leafy eastern suburbs.

Areas like Malvern, Armadale, Kew, Box Hill North, Burwood and Camberwell are beautiful by day. But if you’re having a teen party, brace yourself for hatecrashers.

Many parents think event security means putting the biggest, ugliest adult out the front. Such traits are no match for a gang of super-fit youths with knives.

These days you need adequate planning, plenty of responsible parents and professional party security.

Horror movie

The video above is a compilation of recent gatecrasher activity.

Sadly, I expect to have more footage, very soon.

Yet if we could legislate to control teen events, our children could party safely.

And the destructive morons could be charged with the new offence of ‘Gatecrasher’.

Read my proposal to see what I mean.

Naomi Oakley, Founder, Safe Partying Australia.

Further reading: http://stonnington-leader.whereilive.com.au/news/story/stonnington-parents-warned-to-plan-ahead-for-safe-teen-parties/

Why each parent should have 20 kids

July 30, 2012 at 5:10 am | Posted in Security | Leave a comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
safe teen parties depend on a sensible child to adult ratio

Less really is more.

As teen parties get bigger, riskier and more elaborate, host parents are finding there’s extra help at hand: other parents and responsible (i.e. mature, sober) adults.

This is good news, as parents planning teen events need all the help they can get.

They also need to realise some really important points.

Key among these is the ratio of parents to kids.

Numbers game

If you work on 1 parent for every 15-20 kids, you take a massive step in the right direction.

This manageable ratio means you can task parents to areas that invariably cause problems, like:

  • Monitor toilets and bathrooms to prevent these areas being trashed.
  • Observe bedrooms to discourage unwanted activity.
  • Manage the alcohol area for reasons too important and numerous to list!
  • Patrol fences and other perimeter areas to thwart gatecrashers.

On the list

Another vital thing is to ensure you have the guest list at least 3 days before the event and DO NOT allow any more names to be added.

As the host parent, it’s up to YOU to provide a safe environment for the kids and security staff who come to your home or other venue.

If you tell me you’re having 100 kids, I’ll tell you to have 2 crowd control professionals and 5 parents.

I know this for a fact, because I’ve kept more than 700 teen events incident free.

Some host parents agree to my recommendation.

But when my staff and I arrive at their event, we often find 140 kids and only 2 parents.

This not only infuriates me, it puts everyone in and around the party in danger.

Here’s how.

Eight steps to chaos

  1. You can NOT manage a bar with just two parents.
  2. Your two security staff (if you’re wise enough to book them) will have their hands full securing your front door, enforcing your guest list and searching for drugs and alcohol.
  3. With no adults available to check your perimeter, unwanted guests will stream over the back fence like rodents.
  4. People will start vomiting on couches and behind doors.
  5. Fights will start to simmer all over the place.
  6. The situation will become volatile, needing just a small push to become an all-in brawl.
  7. With no parents to stop them, your back-door gatecrashes will start trashing your home.
  8. With the adults now totally outnumbered, you’ll then blame me and my staff for not entering your home to sort out your self-made disaster (and cop a bottle in the head for our trouble).

Get the picture?

I sure hope so, as I’m NOT making this up.

Your move

I can’t force you to do the right thing.

As a ‘grown-up’, you’re free to make your own mistakes.

But if you do, you may not only harm yourself, your kids, your possessions and your home.

You may also risk the lives of others –  along with the chronic and crippling legal, financial and moral consequences of your arrogance, carelessness and stupidity.

So by all means do your own thing, if you must.

But when all hell breaks loose at your event, don’t you dare try to pass the buck.

KNOW THAT THE ONLY ONE TO BLAME IS YOU!

If, on the other hand, you decide to take a reasonable and responsible approach to hosting a teen party, read my positive proposal for change.

It’s all there.

Naomi Oakley, Founder, Safe Partying Australia.

100 is enough!

June 28, 2012 at 5:36 am | Posted in Security | 1 Comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
safe teen party security

Keep it to close friends …

As our communities struggle to cope with the rise of teen parties, we now have a popularity contest:

100 guests (or more) is the new way to be cool and hip!

Yes, teen parties are getting bigger. I’m now regularly speaking to parents planning 150+ guest events for kids as young as 14!

Yesterday I spoke with a father planning a 200-guest 18th. I naturally assumed this was a double birthday.

Wrong! His daughter is just really really popular.

Whatever happened to ‘one guest for each year of your life?!’

Weekend warriors

Last weekend I did two parties. One was for a 16-year-old (140 kids). The other for an 18-year-old (150 kids).

As usual, the ‘dry’16th in a lovely, up-market, bayside suburb proved the more eventful and difficult to handle.

Money sure doesn’t buy class – especially with events this big. Instead, you need 3 professional security staff and a ratio of 1 (sober, responsible) parent to every 10 kids.

This is extremely important. While you can get away with a ratio of 1:20 in smaller events, big parties are much greater than the sum of their parts.

Why security?

Parents and security, working in concert, are absolutely vital. Among their many responsibilities, they must:

  • Staff every door, window and other entry and point. (Gatecrashers are like rats; they can get in anywhere.)
  • Cloak all bags. (Some are the size of suitcases: 60% are filled with alcohol.)
  • Detect kids smoking cannabis in toilets. (Yes, Mum and Dad, your darling babies really do use drugs.)
  • Patrol grounds and move on kids drinking in bushes and dark spots.
  • Catch and evict kids trying to enter under false names.

As you do all this, you can expect to see teens swearing and abusing parents, neighbours, security staff, police, passers by and each other.

Teens in groups with a few drinks on board believe they’re invincible and often want to ‘take on’ adults en masse.

Yet every time I witness this outside a venue, the parents of the mob are nowhere to be seen.

Solution

If you’re a parent wishing for a safer (more fun, less litigious) event, here’s what to do:

  1. Keep guest numbers below a manageable 100.
  2. Even if it’s an alcohol-free event, expect most kids to bring booze in bags and cloak them accordingly.
  3. Expect half the guests to ‘pre-load’ on grog before they rock up. If you see them gathering in groups or loitering under trees outside your venue, that’s what they’re doing.
  4. Expect gatecrashers. And fear them. A crowd of drunk boys has no respect for adults – quite the opposite. So think twice about approaching them, as they’ll likely attack you as an authority figure.

Lastly, why does any child under 18 even need a boozy party?

Alcohol-fuelled celebrations for minors are not mandatory.

Go roller-skating.

Go cart racing.

Go to a movie.

Do whatever else it takes to talk your child out of the worst decision they may ever make.

And if you think I write this blog just to flog my security business, think again.

I have no desire see your precious teen paralytic, assaulted and face-down in dog shit.

Nor should you.

Naomi Oakley, Founder, Safe Partying Australia.

Crash tackle

May 22, 2012 at 1:51 am | Posted in Security | 1 Comment
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Take a seat. In the head!

Moon madness

Last Saturday night kept me and my staff very busy.

I’m not sure what the moon was doing, but every party we handled had issues. Problems that would’ve turned very ugly had security not been present

Ironically, the alcohol-free events were the most difficult. This was because gatecrashers targeted both.

You wouldn’t believe the lengths they went to! Or the stuff they tried. We had kids crawling in through toilet windows little bit bigger than a post box.

The intruders we kept at bay occupied the neighbour’s yard (lovely!) and hurled garden stakes and deck chairs over the back fence.

These missiles just missed my staff member who’d confronted two intruders that had made it over the fence. As soon as they saw her, they quickly jumped back …

… Then came back with more unwanted guests!

It was sheer luck no-one was impaled.

Remote control

The event I attended had 150 21-year-olds in a fairly remote venue.

The responsible service of alcohol by bar staff was spot on, so (for once!) booze wasn’t a problem.

Our drama came from a different quarter: the frustration of waiting for a taxi.

We knew taxis would be a worry this far out of town, so we tried to call them early. But with little success.

As 30 irritated teens milled waiting in the car park and surrounding dark, the tension was evident and growing.

Though I’d assigned a staff member to observe this area, I thought it best to ring local police for a bit of presence.

While on the phone, I was told a brawl had started. I left a staff member in the venue and ran to where my other colleague was busy separating three angry (and far from little) boys.

We bundled them into waiting transport. Fortunately the police arrived soon after to help control the crowd.

We’re not always this lucky.

Far out

When choosing your party venue, find out if transport will be an issue. Remote sites are great for reducing gatecrashers. But if you go too far out, you’ll have problems moving on the guests you did invite.

Parents must also realise they can’t run a party alone. When they plan one, they need to include responsible assisting parents in the mix.

Both the ‘dry’ teen events had inadequate parent supervision and proved the most difficult to manage.

While our security handled all of Saturday’s parties extremely well, there were issues.

One event had a guest list blow out from 90 to 140 at the last minute. The other had teens pre-guzzling and smuggling booze, urinating in baths and vomiting behind couches.

When you plan a party, you need 1 parent for every 20 kids.  You also need the final guest list in your hand on the Wednesday prior to avoid nasty surprises.

Be smart, or you might not be as ‘lucky’ as these hosts we pulled back from the brink.

Naomi Oakley, Founder, Safe Partying Australia.

Country Capers – Why Crowd Control is Vital at Rural Events.

October 25, 2010 at 3:39 am | Posted in Security | 8 Comments
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
security crowd control safe party

Lock your gate BEFORE the horse bolts!

On Saturday night I had a security team looking after an 18th birthday near Berwick (in Melbourne’s outer east).

The event, for 70 guests, was on a big property on an unmade road. 

My crew initially controlled BYO alcohol entering the property by helping parents organise a central bar and serve all drinks in plastic vessels.

Meanwhile, down the 1 km driveway, other family members were checking names at the front gate and only admitting those on the guest list.

So far so good. The plan was to for my people to head down there and take over.

But before this could happen, at about 9 pm, a white utility with red P plates (registration XFP 105) turned up at the gate. It was relayed to me that the two men in the ute had been drinking.

The men gave a photocopied invitation to the family member at the gate – who denied them entry as they weren’t on the guest list.

The family member then contacted my team (who were still helping with the alcohol) and told Glenn (my supervisor) that the ute had headed towards the dead end part of the road. 

Glenn walked around the property and found two men hiding behind a tree in the middle of a paddock. He asked what they were doing.

They said that because the inside toilet was occupied, they were using the tree. 

By speaking with them further, Glenn ascertained that the men did not have the requisite entry stamps issued by crowd control. 

He was thus able to ask them to leave.

They got back into their vehicle and drove off.

A short time later, my crew was staffing the gate. Once again, the two men turned up in the ute.  This time, two guests from the party got into the vehicle with them.

One in the cabin.

And one in the back tray.

With all four drinking, the ute sped off down the dark, winding, gravel road. 

A recipe for carnage.

The Police arrived soon after – unfortunately just missing the hoons.

This is a good example of how effective crowd control can be at a rural property. 

  1. The guest list worked.
  2. The gatecrashers were detected.
  3. The missing security stamps proved them to be uninvited.

Giddy up!

Naomi Oakley, Managing Director, U-NOME Security Communication Specialists.

Business Blogs

Blog at WordPress.com. | Theme: Pool by Borja Fernandez.
Entries and comments feeds.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.