Report an Incident
While we don't want to lead with the negative, we believe an important part of creating a safe container is to make incident reporting easy and accessible. Use the link below to fill out our incident reporting form.
When considering reporting an incident, it's good to keep this in mind: Most incidents are mild in nature - and those are the ones we want to hear about the most, since they're the least likely to be reported. This could be as simple as saying "this individual made me feel uncomfortable" - that is enough to warrant an incident report. We definitely want all the details you can share, but sometimes it's hard to put our finger on exactly what the problem was. That's OK, we still want to know about it.
Here's a short list of things worthy of being reported:
Here's a short list of things worthy of being reported:
- Someone at an event made you feel uncomfortable. Of course, we're not talking about all discomfort - asking an uncomfortable question is not necessarily a bad thing. In fact, we hope people show up to our events to push their own boundaries. The key here is a difference between trying to expand your own boundaries, and having someone else push against your boundaries.
- Reporting a missing stair. This could be noticing a member or attendee on an event guest list that you've had prior negative experiences with, or hearsay through other individuals.
- Explicit consent violations. This can include people continuing to ask even once you've said no, people continuing to ask even once you've said maybe (or some other non-yes variant), non-consensual non-sexual touching, non-consensual sexual contact, or anything else that did not receive a yes prior to happening.