Blanket safety policies have a powerful appeal. They are legible, defensible, and require no judgment. A single rule, applied to everyone, looks fair and looks responsible. The trouble is that risk is rarely uniform, and policies built on the lowest common denominator tend to misallocate effort: too much friction in low-risk situations, too little protection in genuinely dangerous ones.
This is not an argument against rules. It is an argument for rules that fit the shape of actual risk, which is messier than the rules people prefer.
Why blanket policies feel safe
Universal rules solve a real organizational problem. They reduce the discretion required from frontline workers, lower the legal exposure of the institution, and create a clean line for compliance audits. A school that bans all peanuts is easier to defend than one that distinguishes between students with severe allergies and students without. A workplace that mandates the same PPE for every task is easier to inspect than one that calibrates by exposure. From a liability perspective, the broad rule wins. From a risk-reduction perspective, it often does not. The cost is invisible: time, attention, and resources spent on low-probability scenarios that could have gone toward real ones. The tradeoff is real even when no one tallies it.
Where the gaps actually live
Concrete examples sharpen the point. Playground equipment redesigned to eliminate falls also produced spaces children found boring, leading to less play and worse long-term physical development, a tradeoff documented in multiple developmental studies. Hospital protocols requiring identical handwashing procedures across units produced compliance fatigue and worse outcomes than tailored protocols that targeted high-risk wards. Aviation moved decades ago from rigid checklists to “threat and error management” frameworks because pilots facing actual situations needed judgment, not just compliance. The pattern repeats: any system where a single rule covers a wide range of conditions eventually misses the conditions that matter most. The rule looks like safety. The outcome is closer to theater.
What “calibrated safety” looks like
The alternative is not anarchy. It is risk-tiered design. Identify the conditions where the danger is real and concentrated, then put serious resources there, including training, monitoring, and escalation protocols. For lower-risk conditions, allow more discretion, simpler defaults, and fewer compliance burdens. This is harder than a blanket rule because it requires people in the system to know what they are doing and exercise judgment, which is exactly why institutions resist it. It is also why outcomes improve when they finally make the switch. Hospitals that adopted differentiated infection-control protocols saw lower infection rates than those that piled universal rules on every surface. Workplaces that calibrated PPE to actual exposure saw better compliance on the high-risk tasks where it mattered.
Bottom line
The instinct to write one rule that covers everyone is institutional, not analytical. Real safety usually requires accepting that situations differ and that frontline judgment, supported by real data and real training, beats a poster on the wall. Blanket rules are easier to write than to defend, but the world keeps refusing to be uniform.
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