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Scottish Fire and Rescue Service

The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service (SFRS; Scottish Gaelic: Seirbheis Smàlaidh agus Teasairginn na h-Alba) is the national fire and rescue service of Scotland. It was formed by the merger of eight regional fire services in the country on 1 April 2013. It thus became the largest fire brigade in the United Kingdom, surpassing the London Fire Brigade.[1]

Scottish Fire and Rescue Service
Seirbheis Smàlaidh agus Teasairginn na h-Alba
Operational area
CountryScotland
Agency overview
Established1 April 2013 (1 April 2013)
Employees8,281 (2016)
Facilities and equipment
Stations357
Engines427 (2021)
Ladders25 (2021)
Website
www.firescotland.gov.uk

Consolidation

After a consultation,[2] the Scottish Government confirmed on 8 September 2011[3] that a single fire and rescue service would be created in Scotland to replace the eight existing local authority fire and rescue services.

Following further consultation[4] on the detailed operation of the service, the Police and Fire Reform (Scotland) Bill was published on 17 January 2012.[5] After scrutiny and debate by the Scottish Parliament, the legislation was approved on 27 June 2012.[6] The Bill duly received royal assent as the Police and Fire Reform (Scotland) Act 2012. This Act also created Police Scotland in place of the previous eight regional police forces. The mergers were effective from 1 April 2013. Eight months after the consolidation, an internal report said the reorganisation had not negatively affected operational response.[7]

The eight services that were merged are:

The number of control rooms handling 999 calls was also reduced from eight to three.

The consolidation of regional call centres has reportedly resulted in a number of dispatching errors. For example, a crew from Beauly was sent to a blaze 10 miles away in Dingwall as the dispatcher was allegedly unaware Dingwall had its own fire station.[8]

The service is headquartered in Cambuslang, South Lanarkshire, on the south-eastern outskirts of Glasgow, incorporating a national training centre, opened in January 2013. There are a further three service delivery centres in the east, west and north of the country.[9]

Structure

 
Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Headquarters, Cambuslang

On 16 August 2012, the Scottish Government confirmed the first chief fire officer of the new service would be Alasdair Hay, then acting chief fire officer of Tayside Fire and Rescue Service, following an open recruitment exercise.[10]

Pat Watters, former president of the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities, was also announced as chair of the service, an appointment to run for three years from September 2012.[11]

Members of the SFRS Board appointed in October 2012 were Watters, Bob Benson, James Campbell, Kirsty Darwent, Marieke Dwarshuis, Michael Foxley, Robin Iffla, Bill McQueen, Sid Patten, Neil Pirie, Martin Togneri and Grant Thoms.[12]

Chief officers

Operations

 
SFRS firefighter douses flames at the Glasgow School of Art fire in May 2014

The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service attended 25,002 fires in 2014/15. The service also delivers a preventative programme, with 65,343 free home fire safety visits conducted in 2015/16.[13]

As well as fighting fires, the service attends tens of thousands of specialist services such as road traffic collisions, water rescues and flooding incidents. In 2014/15, it attended 10,740 non-fire incidents.[13]

Water rescue

 
Fair Isle community fire station

After the 2013 merger of SFRS and the abundance of rivers and lochs, it was decided a generalised and revised Water Rescue capability should be established. The result of this is a Mercedes Sprinter van containing water rescue equipment, welfare facilities, and trailering a rigid permanently inflated boat for immediate deployment. Twenty of SFRS' stations have one of these dedicated Water Rescue Units.[14] The Water Rescue Units regularly respond to flooding, difficulty in water, and water-related rescue incidents.[15]

The service is the primary emergency service for the rescue of persons from the River Clyde in Glasgow and works alongside other emergency services during flooding events to ensure the safety of communities and rescue people in difficulty, with specialist swift water rescue teams positioned on major waterways and areas of activity. Firefighters are routinely called out to water, flood and boat rescues. For example, during Storm Frank in December 2015, SFRS received 350 flood-related calls in the space of six days.[16]

Wildfires

In 2015, SFRS were called out to 78 wildfire incidents in total, with over half of those taking place in the north of Scotland.[13]

Medical emergencies

In 2015, a national trial was launched, in partnership with the Scottish Ambulance Service, which has seen firefighters at certain stations receive enhanced CPR training aimed at increasing survival rates for people who suffer out-of-hospital cardiac arrests.[17]

In 2007, Grampian Fire & Rescue Service in partnership with the Scottish Ambulance Service launched two Community First Responder Vehicles at Braemar and Maud[18] fire stations, firefighters at these specific stations trained at First Responder levels can be pagered by the North SDA on request of the Scottish Ambulance Service.

Line rescue

Line or rope rescue is a type of technical rescue involving the use of ropes, harness, anchoring and hauling devices to assist rescues at height or below ground level at urban and structural locations. While many crews are trained to a safe working at height (SWAH) standard, line rescue crews are trained to a more advanced capacity to deal with more complex technical rescues at the likes of open structures, utilising horizontal and vertical stretcher lowering and raising.

Four stations contain these Line Rescue Units (LRU), strategically placed across the country in Altens (Aberdeen), Lochgelly, Tollcross (Edinburgh), and East Kilbride.[14]

Fire stations

Currently the Scottish Fire & Rescue Service operate 356 fire stations throughout Scotland. Scotland's fire stations are crewed in six different ways:

  • Wholetime (WT): A station with full-time firefighters crewing twenty-fours a day.
  • Wholetime/Retained Duty System (WT/RDS): As above but with retained firefighters providing back-up when required.
  • Wholetime/Day-Crewed (WT/DC): Livingston fire station operates with wholetime firefighters crewing the first appliance, and day-shift firefighters crewing the second appliance, and who will then respond via pager at night if required.
  • Retained Duty System (RDS): Crewing on an 'on-call' basis. These are predominantly located in some of the more rural areas.
  • Volunteer (VOL): as above but firefighters receive no payment for their work.
  • Community Response Unit (CRU): a volunteer unit with a small LDV appliance specifically suited to their particular area. Found in the Highlands.

Northern Service Delivery Area

The Northern Service Delivery Area incorporates all of the fire stations of the former fire & rescue services of Grampian (GFRS), Highlands & Islands (H&IFRS) and Tayside (TFRS). It has 1.2 million residents and operates 164 fire stations.[19] The Northern Service Delivery Area headquarters is located at Dyce fire station on the outskirts of the city of Aberdeen. For ease of operations and multi-agency interaction, the Service Delivery Area is further sub-divided into smaller Local Service Areas structured in line with local councils; they are:

  • Perth & Kinross, Angus and Dundee
  • Aberdeen City
  • Aberdeenshire and Moray
  • Highland (East)
  • Highland (West)
  • Western Isles, Orkney Isles and Shetland Isles

East Service Delivery Area

The East Service Delivery Area incorporates fire stations of the former Central Scotland Fire & Rescue Service (CSFRS), Fife Fire & Rescue Service (FFRS) and Lothian & Borders Fire & Rescue Service (L&BFRS). It has 1.6 million residents and operates 65 fire stations.[20] The East Delivery Service Area Headquarters are located at Newbridge, to the west of Edinburgh. The facilities at Newbridge also house the workshops and Asset Resource Centre. In 2020, a new state of the art training facility was opened at Newbridge, which replaced the former one at Thornton, in Fife. For ease of operations and multi-agency interaction, the Service Delivery Area is further sub-divided into smaller Local Service Areas structured in line with local councils; they are:

  • Midlothian, East Lothian and Scottish Borders
  • Edinburgh City
  • Falkirk and West Lothian
  • Stirling & Clackmannanshire
  • Fife

Western Service Delivery Area

The Western Service Delivery Area incorporates all the fire stations of both the former Dumfries & Galloway Fire and Rescue Service (D&GFRS) and Strathclyde Fire & Rescue (SFR). It has 2.4 million residents and operates 127 fire stations.[21] The Western Service Delivery Area headquarters is located at Hamilton Fire Station to the east of Glasgow. For ease of operations and multi-agency interaction, the Service Delivery Area is further sub-divided into smaller Local Service Areas structured in line with local councils; they are:

  • City of Glasgow
  • South Lanarkshire
  • North Lanarkshire
  • East Dumbartonshire, West Dumbartonshire and Argyll & Bute
  • East Renfrewshire, Renfrewshire and Inverclyde
  • East Ayrshire, North Ayrshire and South Ayrshire
  • Dumfries & Galloway

National Training Centre

The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service National Training Centre opened in January 2013. The facility in Cambuslang features a mock town with realistic motorways, railway tracks and buildings, including a multi-storey tenement structure.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ . London Fire Brigade. Archived from the original on 29 April 2011. Retrieved 22 June 2014. LFB employs approximately 7,000 staff of which 5,800 are operational firefighters and officers
  2. ^ "Research report on consultation 15 September 2011". Scottish Government.
  3. ^ "Single Fire and Rescue Service for Scotland". Scottish Government. 8 September 2011.
  4. ^ "Research report on consultation". Scottish Government. 16 December 2011.
  5. ^ "Police and Fire Reform (Scotland) Bill". Scottish Government. 17 January 2012.
  6. ^ "Police and Fire Reform". Scottish Government. 27 June 2012.
  7. ^ "Praise after fire service merger". The Herald. 13 November 2013. Retrieved 6 January 2017.
  8. ^ "All at sea". Private Eye. London: Pressdram Ltd. 10 February 2017.
  9. ^ "Your Area". Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 6 January 2017. three service delivery HQs
  10. ^ "Alasdair Hay named as new chief for merged Scottish fire service". BBC News. 16 August 2012.
  11. ^ "First new Police Authority and Fire Service chairmen appointed". BBC News. 31 August 2012.
  12. ^ "Scottish Fire and Rescue Service" (Press release). Scottish Government. 17 October 2012. Retrieved 19 April 2012.
  13. ^ a b c "Fire & Rescue Statistics 2014-15" (PDF). 15 December 2015. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  14. ^ a b "Review of Specialist Equipment" (PDF). scottishborders.moderngov.co.uk. 8 October 2014.
  15. ^ "Water Safety".
  16. ^ Hannan, Martin (6 January 2016). "Fire crews worked 'flat out' after the flood devastation". The National. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  17. ^ "Firefighters to respond to cardiac arrest cases". BBC News. 29 October 2015.
  18. ^ "Enhanced Medical Role for Fire and Rescue Service | Scottish Government". www.wired-gov.net. Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  19. ^ "North". Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Website. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  20. ^ "East". Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Website. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  21. ^ "West". Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Website. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  22. ^ . STV News. 25 January 2013. Archived from the original on 9 September 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2016.

External links

  • Official website  

scottish, fire, rescue, service, sfrs, redirects, here, shotcrete, steel, fibre, reinforced, shotcrete, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news,. SFRS redirects here For the shotcrete see Steel fibre reinforced shotcrete This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Scottish Fire and Rescue Service news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service SFRS Scottish Gaelic Seirbheis Smalaidh agus Teasairginn na h Alba is the national fire and rescue service of Scotland It was formed by the merger of eight regional fire services in the country on 1 April 2013 It thus became the largest fire brigade in the United Kingdom surpassing the London Fire Brigade 1 Scottish Fire and Rescue ServiceSeirbheis Smalaidh agus Teasairginn na h AlbaOperational areaCountryScotlandAgency overviewEstablished1 April 2013 1 April 2013 Employees8 281 2016 Facilities and equipmentStations357Engines427 2021 Ladders25 2021 Websitewww wbr firescotland wbr gov wbr uk Contents 1 Consolidation 2 Structure 3 Chief officers 4 Operations 4 1 Water rescue 4 2 Wildfires 4 3 Medical emergencies 4 4 Line rescue 5 Fire stations 5 1 Northern Service Delivery Area 5 2 East Service Delivery Area 5 3 Western Service Delivery Area 6 National Training Centre 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksConsolidation EditAfter a consultation 2 the Scottish Government confirmed on 8 September 2011 3 that a single fire and rescue service would be created in Scotland to replace the eight existing local authority fire and rescue services Following further consultation 4 on the detailed operation of the service the Police and Fire Reform Scotland Bill was published on 17 January 2012 5 After scrutiny and debate by the Scottish Parliament the legislation was approved on 27 June 2012 6 The Bill duly received royal assent as the Police and Fire Reform Scotland Act 2012 This Act also created Police Scotland in place of the previous eight regional police forces The mergers were effective from 1 April 2013 Eight months after the consolidation an internal report said the reorganisation had not negatively affected operational response 7 The eight services that were merged are Central Scotland Fire and Rescue Service Dumfries and Galloway Fire and Rescue Service Fife Fire and Rescue Service Grampian Fire and Rescue Service Highlands and Islands Fire and Rescue Service Lothian and Borders Fire and Rescue Service Strathclyde Fire and Rescue Tayside Fire and Rescue Service The number of control rooms handling 999 calls was also reduced from eight to three The consolidation of regional call centres has reportedly resulted in a number of dispatching errors For example a crew from Beauly was sent to a blaze 10 miles away in Dingwall as the dispatcher was allegedly unaware Dingwall had its own fire station 8 The service is headquartered in Cambuslang South Lanarkshire on the south eastern outskirts of Glasgow incorporating a national training centre opened in January 2013 There are a further three service delivery centres in the east west and north of the country 9 Structure Edit Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Headquarters Cambuslang On 16 August 2012 the Scottish Government confirmed the first chief fire officer of the new service would be Alasdair Hay then acting chief fire officer of Tayside Fire and Rescue Service following an open recruitment exercise 10 Pat Watters former president of the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities was also announced as chair of the service an appointment to run for three years from September 2012 11 Members of the SFRS Board appointed in October 2012 were Watters Bob Benson James Campbell Kirsty Darwent Marieke Dwarshuis Michael Foxley Robin Iffla Bill McQueen Sid Patten Neil Pirie Martin Togneri and Grant Thoms 12 Chief officers Edit2013 2019 Alasdair Hay 2019 2022 Martin Blunden 2022 present Ross HaggartOperations Edit SFRS firefighter douses flames at the Glasgow School of Art fire in May 2014 The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service attended 25 002 fires in 2014 15 The service also delivers a preventative programme with 65 343 free home fire safety visits conducted in 2015 16 13 As well as fighting fires the service attends tens of thousands of specialist services such as road traffic collisions water rescues and flooding incidents In 2014 15 it attended 10 740 non fire incidents 13 Water rescue Edit Fair Isle community fire station After the 2013 merger of SFRS and the abundance of rivers and lochs it was decided a generalised and revised Water Rescue capability should be established The result of this is a Mercedes Sprinter van containing water rescue equipment welfare facilities and trailering a rigid permanently inflated boat for immediate deployment Twenty of SFRS stations have one of these dedicated Water Rescue Units 14 The Water Rescue Units regularly respond to flooding difficulty in water and water related rescue incidents 15 The service is the primary emergency service for the rescue of persons from the River Clyde in Glasgow and works alongside other emergency services during flooding events to ensure the safety of communities and rescue people in difficulty with specialist swift water rescue teams positioned on major waterways and areas of activity Firefighters are routinely called out to water flood and boat rescues For example during Storm Frank in December 2015 SFRS received 350 flood related calls in the space of six days 16 Wildfires Edit In 2015 SFRS were called out to 78 wildfire incidents in total with over half of those taking place in the north of Scotland 13 Medical emergencies Edit In 2015 a national trial was launched in partnership with the Scottish Ambulance Service which has seen firefighters at certain stations receive enhanced CPR training aimed at increasing survival rates for people who suffer out of hospital cardiac arrests 17 In 2007 Grampian Fire amp Rescue Service in partnership with the Scottish Ambulance Service launched two Community First Responder Vehicles at Braemar and Maud 18 fire stations firefighters at these specific stations trained at First Responder levels can be pagered by the North SDA on request of the Scottish Ambulance Service Line rescue Edit Line or rope rescue is a type of technical rescue involving the use of ropes harness anchoring and hauling devices to assist rescues at height or below ground level at urban and structural locations While many crews are trained to a safe working at height SWAH standard line rescue crews are trained to a more advanced capacity to deal with more complex technical rescues at the likes of open structures utilising horizontal and vertical stretcher lowering and raising Four stations contain these Line Rescue Units LRU strategically placed across the country in Altens Aberdeen Lochgelly Tollcross Edinburgh and East Kilbride 14 Fire stations EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Currently the Scottish Fire amp Rescue Service operate 356 fire stations throughout Scotland Scotland s fire stations are crewed in six different ways Wholetime WT A station with full time firefighters crewing twenty fours a day Wholetime Retained Duty System WT RDS As above but with retained firefighters providing back up when required Wholetime Day Crewed WT DC Livingston fire station operates with wholetime firefighters crewing the first appliance and day shift firefighters crewing the second appliance and who will then respond via pager at night if required Retained Duty System RDS Crewing on an on call basis These are predominantly located in some of the more rural areas Volunteer VOL as above but firefighters receive no payment for their work Community Response Unit CRU a volunteer unit with a small LDV appliance specifically suited to their particular area Found in the Highlands Northern Service Delivery Area Edit The Northern Service Delivery Area incorporates all of the fire stations of the former fire amp rescue services of Grampian GFRS Highlands amp Islands H amp IFRS and Tayside TFRS It has 1 2 million residents and operates 164 fire stations 19 The Northern Service Delivery Area headquarters is located at Dyce fire station on the outskirts of the city of Aberdeen For ease of operations and multi agency interaction the Service Delivery Area is further sub divided into smaller Local Service Areas structured in line with local councils they are Perth amp Kinross Angus and Dundee Aberdeen City Aberdeenshire and Moray Highland East Highland West Western Isles Orkney Isles and Shetland IslesEast Service Delivery Area Edit The East Service Delivery Area incorporates fire stations of the former Central Scotland Fire amp Rescue Service CSFRS Fife Fire amp Rescue Service FFRS and Lothian amp Borders Fire amp Rescue Service L amp BFRS It has 1 6 million residents and operates 65 fire stations 20 The East Delivery Service Area Headquarters are located at Newbridge to the west of Edinburgh The facilities at Newbridge also house the workshops and Asset Resource Centre In 2020 a new state of the art training facility was opened at Newbridge which replaced the former one at Thornton in Fife For ease of operations and multi agency interaction the Service Delivery Area is further sub divided into smaller Local Service Areas structured in line with local councils they are Midlothian East Lothian and Scottish Borders Edinburgh City Falkirk and West Lothian Stirling amp Clackmannanshire FifeWestern Service Delivery Area Edit The Western Service Delivery Area incorporates all the fire stations of both the former Dumfries amp Galloway Fire and Rescue Service D amp GFRS and Strathclyde Fire amp Rescue SFR It has 2 4 million residents and operates 127 fire stations 21 The Western Service Delivery Area headquarters is located at Hamilton Fire Station to the east of Glasgow For ease of operations and multi agency interaction the Service Delivery Area is further sub divided into smaller Local Service Areas structured in line with local councils they are City of Glasgow South Lanarkshire North Lanarkshire East Dumbartonshire West Dumbartonshire and Argyll amp Bute East Renfrewshire Renfrewshire and Inverclyde East Ayrshire North Ayrshire and South Ayrshire Dumfries amp GallowayNational Training Centre EditMain article Scottish Fire and Rescue Service National Training Centre The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service National Training Centre opened in January 2013 The facility in Cambuslang features a mock town with realistic motorways railway tracks and buildings including a multi storey tenement structure 22 See also EditHer Majesty s Fire Service Inspectorate for Scotland Mountain Rescue Committee of Scotland List of British firefighters killed in the line of dutyReferences Edit Who we are London Fire Brigade Archived from the original on 29 April 2011 Retrieved 22 June 2014 LFB employs approximately 7 000 staff of which 5 800 are operational firefighters and officers Research report on consultation 15 September 2011 Scottish Government Single Fire and Rescue Service for Scotland Scottish Government 8 September 2011 Research report on consultation Scottish Government 16 December 2011 Police and Fire Reform Scotland Bill Scottish Government 17 January 2012 Police and Fire Reform Scottish Government 27 June 2012 Praise after fire service merger The Herald 13 November 2013 Retrieved 6 January 2017 All at sea Private Eye London Pressdram Ltd 10 February 2017 Your Area Government of the United Kingdom Retrieved 6 January 2017 three service delivery HQs Alasdair Hay named as new chief for merged Scottish fire service BBC News 16 August 2012 First new Police Authority and Fire Service chairmen appointed BBC News 31 August 2012 Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Press release Scottish Government 17 October 2012 Retrieved 19 April 2012 a b c Fire amp Rescue Statistics 2014 15 PDF 15 December 2015 Retrieved 19 April 2016 a b Review of Specialist Equipment PDF scottishborders moderngov co uk 8 October 2014 Water Safety Hannan Martin 6 January 2016 Fire crews worked flat out after the flood devastation The National Retrieved 19 April 2016 Firefighters to respond to cardiac arrest cases BBC News 29 October 2015 Enhanced Medical Role for Fire and Rescue Service Scottish Government www wired gov net Retrieved 7 March 2022 North Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Website Retrieved 15 December 2022 East Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Website Retrieved 15 December 2022 West Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Website Retrieved 15 December 2022 New fire training centre simulates burning buildings and train crashes STV News 25 January 2013 Archived from the original on 9 September 2017 Retrieved 19 April 2016 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scottish Fire and Rescue Service amp oldid 1130290580, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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