Tag Archives: primary authority schemes

So Where is the Government Going With Fire?

23 Oct

A better question to ask might be which Government Department will have the most impact on the future of fire?  The answer should be simple as the Department for Communities and Local Government has the remit for the English Fire and Rescue Services with the other devolved administrations looking after their own Fire and Rescue Services.

However in addition to DCLG the Home Office via the Home Secretary is also seemingly beginning to offer a view on the future of the Fire and Rescue Service. In particular Theresa May commented in September that the need for further spending cuts will necessitate the future integration of the police, fire and ambulance emergency services.

Fire Engine

And it’s not just the Home Office that has a view on fire; the Cabinet Office has also had its input here via its Mutual’s Initiative. Indeed the Cabinet Office has ‘put its money where its mouth is’ by  providing Cleveland Fire Brigade with £95,000 backing from the £10 million Mutual Support Programme so that it can get “specialist business expertise to move the plan for Britain’s first ‘John Lewis style’ Fire Brigade a step closer to reality.”

Moving right along there’s yet another Government Department that has a say in fire and that’s the Department for Business Innovation and Skills who are responsible for Primary Authority Schemes that now include fire. These schemes were designed to create business investment in growth by developing confidence that regulators in different local authority areas would not place competing demands on a business which in turn could impose extra financial burdens on it.

The question I keep asking myself is do all these different Departments need to be involved, indeed do they talk to each other – joined up Government?

The next election is looming and once the result is known there could be even more changes, my bet is even more Departments will become involved and I’m polishing up my John Lewis Card just in case the commercial sector takes over – free coffee every time I cycle to a Waitrose could become call by your fire station for burger and chips…

Caricature Graham Ellicott

Graham Ellicott, FIA CEO

 

 

 By Graham Ellicott, FIA CEO

Bandits at 12 0’Clock Over Hendon!

15 May

By Graham Ellicott, FIA CEO

Having worked in the fire industry for well over 30 years I know that I’m getting on a bit but a day out recently speaking at a fire seminar at RAF Hendon took me back even further to the late 1960s – is that really getting on for 50 years ago?

As a callow youth I had the great fortune to fly Chipmunks out of RAF Woodvale and that included aerobatics such as stall turns and barrel rolls. Imagine the scene – a spotty youth trying to keep down his breakfast while fighting to control the joystick as he hums Eric Coates’ Dam Buster march and shouts into the throat microphone ‘Roger, Woodvale Tower. Bandits at twelve o’clock. Wilco and out.’ Too much reading of Biggles methinks…

And to compound my elevated age the Chipmunk was a replacement for none other than that famous biplane the Tiger Moth!

So what reminded me in particular of my advanced years? Well it was the immaculately preserved Chipmunk in the Hendon Museum and my guess is that it could have been there nearly 20 years having retired from RAF service in 1996!

The preserved Chipmunk at Hendon

The preserved Chipmunk that led to the reminscing

However, the seminar was anything but dated with much information regarding the up to date approach of London Fire Brigade and, in particular, its enforcement activities. The LFB speaker also discussed their initiatives with sprinklers and false alarms not to mention Primary Authority Schemes and trends in fires and their associated causes.

Trade speakers at the seminar gave excellent presentations on numerous subjects including Technology Evolution via Digital Platforms, Lifetime Cost Management, Radio Fire Detection, Aspirating Fire Detection and the Door Control Standard BS BS 7273-4:2007.

Most seminar delegates also took advantage of the Museum and, being around military aircraft, many remembered their time in the armed services. Indeed it’s only when you get talking to people in this type of situation that you realise how much some have achieved in life with many of them having risked their lives for the greater good of us all. Some of the exploits told made my stall turn in a Chipmunk seem pretty tame and my playing at being a fighter pilot pretty pathetic…