Union Seeks Urgent Action On Attacks
Attacks on firefighters rise to 40 a week;
crews face diet of shootings, bricks and bottles
The Union has called for “properly resourced, national
strategy” to tackle the widespread and growing problem
of attacks on firefighters as it unveils new research showing
that are 40 attacks on UK fire and rescue crews every week.
In some parts of the country, FBU members are served a daily
diet of bricks, bottles and missiles as they fight fires; in
parts of the country ambushes have been set for firefighters.
The attacks include: scaffolding poles being thrown through
windscreens of fire engines; crews being attacked with concrete
blocks, bricks and bottles; being shot at; spat at; equipment
tampered with or stolen; direct physical assaults on fire crews;
and equipment being urinated on.
And under-reporting of attacks means that the figure could be
as much as three times higher. Official statistics show that
attacks are now running at about 2,000 a year, but the FBU and
the brigades contacted during the research acknowledge that
there is a serious problem of under-reporting.
Not just inner city problem
Although seen largely as aninner city problem, the research
uncovered reports of attacks in the South Wales valleys, Royal
Berkshire, small towns in Scotland and sedate Tonbridge Wells.
In launching the new research in Manchester today, FBU General
Secretary Andy Gilchrist said:
“The number and ferocity of the attacks appears to be
getting worse. A young boy died in Scotland during one attack
and it is only a question of time before a firefighter is killed.
Intolerable, inexcusable
“These attacks are inexcusable and must not be tolerated.
It can never be part of anyone’s job to get a brick or
bottle in the head or to be spat at.
“The causes appear complex and we need more than knee-jerk
reaction headlines calling for ‘crackdowns’. Many
attacks are in deprived areas with poor youth facilities and
poor housing, where bored young people turn to drugs and alcohol.
“But they happen in many other types of areas which are
neither poor nor deprived. There is no quick-fix solution but
we need to start with a properly resourced, national strategy
rather than it being left to cash-strapped local fire services,”
Andy Gilchrist said.
Pre-planned ambushes
There is evidence of fires being deliberately started to lure
fire crews into pre-planned ambushes. Even if actual physical
violence doesn’t take place, fire crews still face threats,
intimidation and abuse.
Official figures from Northern Ireland reveal that there were
1,200 attacks on crews in the last three years, with serious
concerns that the problem is being underplayed. In Scotland
, where statistics have only been collated more recently, 388
hostile incidents were recorded in 2004.
In England and Wales, in the nine-month period to the end of
January 2005 (based on data from only 18 of 50 brigades) 393
attacks were reported. When statistics are extrapolated to cover
all brigades over 12 months, they suggest more than 1,200 attacks.
The level of under-reporting is demonstrated by official statistics
from the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, showing that there
were only nine attacks in the whole of the Greater Manchester
area in the nine months to the end of January 2005. Figures
collected by the brigade itself indicate attacks running at
around 200 a year.
Key points
Key points from the analysis by Labour Research Department:
• Statistics - more
needs to be done to ensure there is proper collection of standardised
statistics on attacks. In some brigades, fire crews are being
encouraged to report every single incident, but they will
be encouraged even more if they understand how the figures
can be used.
• Co-ordination and evaluation
– different initiatives are being taken around the country,
including public awareness campaigns and community-based projects
with offenders and potential offenders. These need to be monitored
and properly evaluated at national level so that brigades
can learn more quickly what works and what doesn’t.
What may help in one area may hinder in another.
• Training –
operational guidance on dynamic risk assessment can be part
of the solution but crews need to be properly trained in its
application. If incidents cannot be avoided then an appropriate
level of training for fire crews should help them deal with
the situations.
• Resources –
training and initiatives with schools and the community need
to be maintained over the long term and need dedicated resources.
A summary of the LRD report will be available on
the FBU website later this week and the full document will shortly
be distributed widely in the Union, to key fire and rescue stakeholders
and to Government. There will also be extensive coverage of
the research and our campaign to stop the attacks in the next
issue of Firefighter magazine.
Opposition hardening to Controls Regionalisation
Councillors at the South East Regional Management Board meeting
last Thursday were queuing up to speak in opposition to the
Regionalisation (RMB) of Emergency Fire Controls.
“Not one councillor spoke in support,” Mark Simmons,
FBU regional official told the e-bulletin. “The room was
ringing with comments such as, ‘very concerned with the
whole process’, ‘nobody wants this regional call
centre, this is being forced upon us.’ The meeting was
on the verge of formally rejecting the project.”
However, instead they opted for sending a letter to ODPM, detailing
all their concerns and seeking assurances.
Nevertheless, councillors in the South East are becoming more
hostile to the project as the meetings go on. The FBU will be
at every RMB meeting, just like the ‘ bad penny that wont
go away’, said Mark.
The next South East RMB meeting will be held the 13 June.
Control campaign seminar
A one day seminar to assist brigade officials in the Union’s
Campaign Against the Regionalisation of Emergency Fire Controls
is to be held in Eastbourne on 28 April.
National representatives of the Union will be attending and
giving briefings.
Executive Council Meeting
Pensions, co-responding, New Dimension and a three-day seminar
specifically on officer members’ issues will be under
discussion at the FBU Executive Council meeting in Glasgow on
Wednesday.
General Secretary Election
Most members should have started received ballot papers for
the election of FBU General Secretary.
If you haven’t received your ballot paper by Tuesday April
19 contact the membership department at FBU Head Office: 0208
541 1765.
The ballot closes May 6.
This election is for the most senior position in the FBU and
the outcome will have an important impact on all members’
future, the future of the Union and the future of the UK fire
and rescue service.
Failing to use your vote means handing the destiny of the Union
for the next five years – and the direction of the workplace
campaigns it fights on your behalf – over to somebody
else!
It’s Your Union
Make Your Voice Heard.
Use Your Vote!
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Last Modified: 7/04/08 10:50,