American Circus Educators Magazine Winter 2018 (Issue 3, Volume 14) | Page 14

For more than a decade, workshops on various aspects of rigging for aerial performance have been part of ACE and AYCO events, including the EdCons and Festivals. These sessions have always been an opportunity to deepen our understanding of the serious risks inherent in putting people up in the air, and to access tools, knowledge, and skills that can help us effectively manage that risk. - - BY JONATHAN DEULL ACE Safety Consultant At this year’s EdCon we took a new cut at the topic, offering for the first time a session on the most common rigging mistakes and pitfalls that people run into. To prepare for this, we informally surveyed interested folks, including professional riggers, to get their “greatest hits.” We also relied heavily on previous work on this topic done by Chuck Johnson and Bev Sobelman, two of the leading lights of the ACE Safety Program. Like all of our sessions— and like this article—the workshops were not intended as a “how-to” guide or training for competence as riggers, but as a tool to help us ask the right questions. It is part of the ACE/ AYCO commitment to enhance awareness so that we as circus educators, facility/production managers, and performers, can do what we do more safely as part of a process of continual learning and improvement. Specifically, it is NOT a replacement for having qualified and competent people design, install, operate, and regularly inspect your setup. Finally, it is worth noting that rigging is just one part of the larger challenge of creating and maintaining a safe environment and safe operations. PHOTOS IN THIS ARTICLE PROVIDED BY JONATHAN DEULL 14 15