Just for kicks, read the Norwegian Cruise Line's Guest Code of Conduct policy: http://www.ncl.com/faq/guest-conduct-policy
They make parents repsonsible for their young adult's behavior! o.0 And we probably wouldn't confiscate skateboards, either. On Fri, Jan 17, 2014 at 12:07 PM, Susan Spencer <[email protected]>wrote: > Hi Christoph, > > Well, I suppose that a Code of Conduct is meaningless without a plan to > implement it. No need for chaos and confusion and miscommunication to > erupt if an incident occurs. Having a process defined is always the most > efficient way to handle any potential occurrence (this goes for running a > convention as well as running a data center). It's just logical and > practical. It's like having an emergency exit plan posted for use in the > event of fire. It's no good to figure out what to do, word it properly, > and post it once a fire breaks out. It's only good if it's posted and > everyone knows about it beforehand. And it doesn't increase the risk of > fire. And no one believes that it implies that the building is a wreck and > a fire hazard, so no one is insulted or made uncomfortable by it. > > The discussion about keeping people safe and providing a reasonable > assurance of a respectful environment has been all over the web for years. > I can't possibly cover all the bases about this, especially to everyone's > satisfaction. I'm sorry if this sounds like I'm avoiding the issue, but > truly there is so much content that I would be spending several days trying > to provide you a synopsis. Perhaps, if you are interested, you could > investigate how other companies and organizations have implemented their > policies and post what you think everyone should know. > >
_______________________________________________ CREATE mailing list [email protected] http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/create
