The more people that are involved in responding to a crisis, the less likely it is that anyone will do anything. If there is one person, they think "it's up to me" and they act. If there's 2 responders, they each think the other might step up, so each is less likely to act. Extrapolate that out to 376 responders there is about a 0 percent chance any given individual will take action.
The more people that are involved in responding to a crisis, the less likely it is that anyone will do anything. If there is one person, they think "it's up to me" and they act. If there's 2 responders, they each think the other might step up, so each is less likely to act. Extrapolate that out to 376 responders there is about a 0 percent chance any given individual will take action.
Especially when there is supervisors on site holding some back who are attempting