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IAVM Textbook Flash Sale – 50% Off Limited Time Offer

August 11, 2020
by Amy Fitzpatrick
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Get your copy NOW before this offer expires!

Help Us Save Public Venues Now!!!

August 11, 2020
by Amy Fitzpatrick
#savepublicvenuesnow, industryadvocacy, payrollprotectionprogram, saveourpublicvenues, savepublicvenues, savevenuesnow
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Watch the Advocacy ZOOMcast Now!
 
Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU!!! To those of you who have already helped spread the word online and reached out to your congressional representatives, thank you for helping advocate for our industry.
 
We know a few of you had issues accessing the Advocacy Toolkit last week and we’ve updated our website to make sure that you can access these tools in the way that best suits you! You can download them from our webpage HERE or by clicking the button below! Thanks for making advocacy a priority in our industry.
 
if you missed it yesterday you can watch the recording of our Advocacy ZOOMcast online now, where we provided an update on the the necessary call to action for our industry right now.
 
Thanks again to everyone who joined us for the ZOOMcast yesterday and have posted something online or reached out to congress to let their voice be heard. Let’s keep making noise!!!
 
DOWNLOAD THE IAVM ADVOCACY TOOLKIT NOW

A Warm Welcome To Our Newest Members

August 10, 2020
by Gina Brydson
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Please welcome our newest members who joined IAVM in July 2020. Thank you for being a part of the association! Also, let us get to know you better by participating in the I Am Venue Management series. Please visit http://www.iavm.org/i-am-venue-management-share-your-story to share your story and photo.

Brad Brettschneider, Passion City Church, Atlanta, GA, United States

Mark Briggs, Parsons Corporation, Plantation, FL, United States

Jared Charity, Allied Universal Event Services (AUES), Fullerton, CA, United States

Natalie Duesler, Old National Events Plaza, Evansville, IN, United States

Monica Fawknotson, Metro Nashville Sports Authority, Nashville, TN, United States

Eduardo Garza, Harris Center for the Arts, Folsom, CA, United States

Nick Gockel, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, United States

Caron Grant, Charles W. Eisemann Center for Performing Arts & Corporate Presentations, Richardson, TX, United States

Emily Lacey, Georgetown University, Arlington, VA, United States

CJ LaRoche, , New York, NY, United States

Heather McAvoy, Schuler Shook, Pleasanton, CA, United States

Christopher Meegan, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Alpharetta, GA, United States

Steven Michelman, Entertainment Project Services, LLC, Las Vegas, NV, United States

Brian Mishkin, Birmingham Jefferson Convention Complex, Birmingham, AL, United States

Amelia Northrup-Simpson, Tessitura Network, Dallas, TX, United States

Ted Ohl, Schuler Shook, New York, NY, United States

Janet Pope, Lynnwood Public Facilities District, Lynnwood, WA, United States

Jordan Racine, Venue Coalition, Westlake Village, CA, United States

Johanna Santafe, Priava Group Operations Pty Ltd, Parramatta, NSW, Australia

Micah Smith, Old National Events Plaza, Evansville, IN, United States

Alex Soltero, Los Angeles Convention Center, Los Angeles, CA, United States

Nicole Vartanian, Brisbane Racing Club Limited, Hamilton Central, QLD, Australia

Tom Cornwall’s Life in the NHL Bubble One of Checking Off Once-in-a-Lifetime Experience

August 07, 2020
by R.V. Baugus
#nationalhockeyleague, #oakviewgroup, #stanleycup, #tomcornwall
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By Tom Cornwall, CVE

I retired from Oilers Entertainment Group in December 2019 after a great 47-year career in sports/entertainment and was fortunate to have been in several unique roles and be involved in several once-in-a-lifetime events along the way. My wife, Betsy, and I had planned for 2020 to be an awesome year of adventures and travel to celebrate our retirements. And then the pandemic hit and changed all that. And instead of travel, 2020 found us living a life of self-imposed isolation at our lake property an hour south of Edmonton. After four-plus months of pretty well exhausting the ‘Honey-Do list’ and wondering what I was going to do to occupy my time, the phone call came and I wouldn’t have to worry any longer what I was going to do, at least for the next several months.

A good friend, Doug Higgons, from Oak View Group, called and asked if I would be interested in helping his team with a National Hockey League contract to manage the security and hygiene protocols for their Return To Play Hub Cities Tournament to award the 2020 Stanley Cup. Edmonton and Toronto were to be the chosen hub cities and he knew I would be a great asset to their team because of my previous experience with the NHL, living in Edmonton and just retiring from OEG after helping build and operate Rogers Place. Doug explained that the NHL was creating a secure bubble and I would need to physically move my life into the bubble for the next 80 days if I was to be a part of this project. It didn’t take much persuasion to say YES to another once-in-a-lifetime major project. It did take a little convincing Betsy that she would be OK for the next 80 days taking on ALL the household chores and only communicating with me through FaceTime for that whole time.

So on July 14 I joined members of Prevent Advisors, a division of Oak View Group, in Edmonton and we began working with the NHL to create and secure ‘the bubble.’ The OVG Edmonton bubble team is a group of six whose role is to work with the NHL staff to build and secure the bubble and ensure the health/safety/security/hygiene protocols are adhered to by all who work/live in the bubble for the length of the tournament. We have five Compliance Officers and a Facility Hygiene Officer who work hand-in-hand with NHL Legal/Medical to implement and monitor the protocols. OVG also has a similar team in the other hub city of Toronto doing the same thing there. IAVM member Frantzer LeBlanc is a member of that team.

The hub city concept is for 12 NHL teams to reside/play hockey inside a secure bubble and to eventually crown the Stanley Cup Champion in early October at the end of the tournament. Twelve Western Conference teams are in Edmonton and 12 Eastern Conference teams are in Toronto. The quarterfinals and semifinals are played in each hub city and then the two remaining teams in Toronto will move to the Edmonton bubble and complete for Eastern/Western Conference Champions and then those two teams will compete for the Stanley Cup.

Toronto’s bubble is a bit different design but the Edmonton bubble is literally a secure fence connecting three hotels and ROGERS PLACE arena and Scotia Place Plaza in Ice District in downtown Edmonton together creating a secure path from one property to the next over about 3.5 city blocks. Inside the bubble are the people responsible for putting on the tournament, the teams participating, and the medical and security teams responsible for keeping everyone safe. With few exceptions for some hotel and contractor staff everyone with an essential role is virtually locked in the bubble 24/7 until the tournament is over. We work, eat, and sleep inside the bubble for approximately 80 days when the Stanley Cup will be awarded. There are about 650 hockey players, staff, and management plus about another 300 NHL staff/contractors and hotel/arena staff involved in the Edmonton bubble. Toronto has a similar number.

Through amazing cooperation from city, Provincial, and Federal governmental agencies, the NHL was able to reach agreement to have the two Canadian cities host this tournament. Anyone inside the bubble undergoes COVID testing and there are very stringent quarantine and contact tracing protocols we follow should anyone test positive on any given day. After 18 days and a few thousand tests, we don’t have any positive test results in Edmonton. This is largely due to the hygiene protocols OVG and the NHL have put in place. EVERYONE wears a mask except when in your hotel room or at meals, no exceptions. Some 200-plus hand sanitizers plus disinfectant sprays and wipes have been placed strategically throughout the bubble so that whether you are walking the path to/from the hotels or in the hotel or arena there is sanitization equipment within easy reach. Everyone has been issued personal packets of wipes and hand sanitizer and signage everywhere reminds all to wash hands regularly and properly, to practice social distancing, and always wear your mask. The only time the mask isn’t required is when the hockey players, coaches, and officials are on the ice for the practices and games. Otherwise NOBODY is exempt from wearing a mask at all times.

After twelve days of helping my team and the NHL staff build all the fences, distribute all the sanitization equipment, hang all the signs, and set up all the hockey equipment in the locker rooms, weight rooms, team medical spaces, and set up the COVID testing facilities, the twelve hockey teams arrived in Edmonton and entered the bubble to begin practice and participating in the tournament. My role as one of the Prevent Advisors/OVG Hub City Compliance Officers is to make sure the security is in place to ensure no unauthorized person enters or leaves the bubble, ensure all sanitization equipment is always in place, filled and available for use, ensure everyone gets tested every day, and ensure compliance with the hygiene protocols established as part of the NHL Phase 4 Return to Play Protocols agreed to by the NHL Players and General Managers. We literally walk the hotels, fence lines, outdoor patio spaces, arena, and restaurants to ensure there is enough sanitization supplies and that people are wearing masks and following proper social distancing protocols.

Today, August 7, was the start of the elimination games and most of us have been in the bubble for 24 days and have 58 more to go! Another once-in-a-life event opportunity that I am proud to be a part of.

To see a video on NHL life in the bubble, click here.

Tom Cornwall, CVE, is Hub City Compliance Officer for Oak View Group/Prevent Advisors.

IAVM Member Venues Continue Achieving GBAC STAR Facility Accreditation

August 07, 2020
by R.V. Baugus
#gbacstar, #issa, IAVM
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By ISSA and R.V. Baugus

IAVM members continue to go through and earn GBAC STAR accreditation from the Global Biorisk Advisory Council, a Division of ISSA, the worldwide cleaning industry association. There are currently more than 3,000 facilities in 66 different countries undergoing the process of earning GBAC STAR accreditation.

Outside the industry of interest is the Dubai Mall is the first shopping center to achieve GBAC STAR™ Facility Accreditation. In the past week this mall, one of the largest shopping malls in the world, along with 14 additional facilities around the globe have achieved accreditation.

Newly accredited facilities include:

Ashford Castle in Cong, County Mayo, Ireland
Brazilian Court Hotel in Palm Beach, Fla.
Chase Center, home to the NBA’s Golden State Warriors, in San Francisco
The Dubai Mall in Dubai, United Arab Emirates
The Evelyn Hotel in New York City
Hotel Amigo, a Rocco Forte Hotel in Brussels, Belgium
Il Sereno Hotel in Torno, Italy
Long Beach Convention and Entertainment Center in Long Beach, Calif.
The Palace Hotel in Tokyo, Japan
Palm Springs Convention Center in Palm Springs, Calif.
Phoenix Convention Center in Phoenix
Rockliffe Hall in Hurworth-on-Tees, Darlington, United Kingdom
United Scrap Metal in Philadelphia
Villa Pliniana Hotel in Torno, Italy
Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C.

GBAC STAR is the cleaning industry’s only outbreak prevention, response, and recovery accreditation for all types of facilities, including retail, stadiums and arenas, hotels, restaurants, commercial, and more. Accreditation ensures a facility has highly skilled and trained cleaning professionals who follow a strict cleaning, disinfection, and infectious disease prevention program to minimize risks associated with infectious agents like the novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2).

“No matter where a facility is located, GBAC STAR’s program elements can help organizations establish cleaning and disinfection practices that help prevent the spread of infectious disease,” said ISSA Executive Director John Barrett. “GBAC STAR is truly changing the way the world views cleaning.”

More than 40 facilities worldwide have achieved GBAC STAR accreditation to date. GBAC has produced a series of video interviews with executives at accredited facilities about their experience with the GBAC STAR process and what the accreditation means to them. Hear from leaders from Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, STAPLES Center in Los Angeles, and more at this link.

Scroll down on the link to “Media Interviews” to hear IAVM members.

To review a full list of GBAC STAR accredited facilities, committed facilities, and industry supporters, click here.

To apply for GBAC STAR facility accreditation, visit gbac.org/star.

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