When to go back to Programming? Risk Management Decisions for COVID-19
Rick Curtis
Rick Curtis is the Founder and CEO of IncidentAnalytix and OutdoorEd.com. He has been the Director of the Outdoor Action Program at Princeton University, one of the largest college outdoor orientation programs, for over 39 years. He developed the Risk Assessment and Safety Management Model (RASM) in 2001 as a primary tool for staff to assess and manage risk in the field. Rick is the author of The Backpacker's Field Manual published by Random House, used as a textbook by outdoor programs across the country.
The focus of this webinar is examining the challenges of making risk management decisions about when to return to programming due to COVID-19. I explore using Safety I and Safety II approaches to risk management assessment and present some decision-making tools to help you determine how and when to start programming again and what level of activity that might mean.
I hope this gives you some new tools for helping to make program operation decisions about COVID-19.
Download Files
- When to go Back to Programming Webinar PowerPoint
- Visio Cross-Functional Flowchart Sample (PDF)
- Microsoft Excel Cross-Functional Flowchart Template
- Microsoft Visio Cross-Functional Flowchart (ZIP) – format added to Visio generated file (need Visio to open)
- Risk-Essential Matrix Sample (PDF)
- Kanban Board Sample (PDF)
- Vertical Decision Tree (PDF)
- Outdoor Orientation Program Decision Tree Sample (PDF)
- Timeline-Keyframe-Filter MindMap (PDF)
- Orientation Program Goals MindMap Sample (PDF)
- Mindjet COVID-19 Sample Files – All of the Examples in MindJet Format (ZIP)
Product Information:
- MindJet 30-day Free Trial (Mac/Windows)
- Video Showing How to Create a Cross-Functional Flowchart (YouTube)
- Microsoft Visio – you need the paid Visio Plan 2 to create the Cross-Functional Flow-charts automatically from Excel