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#1 Posted : 01 August 2009 21:11:00(UTC)
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Posted By Paul T9 I’m a fire fighter but not involved in this and I am also a member of IOSH a couple of my colleagues have asked my opinion on this. Please read but remember that AUG 6 may well apply here. http://www.dailymail.co....rvices-stood-waited.html
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#2 Posted : 02 August 2009 03:44:00(UTC)
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Posted By Raymond Rapp Paul So, what is your opinion on this news article or are you just highlighting it for our benefit and discussion? Ray
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#3 Posted : 02 August 2009 08:41:00(UTC)
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Posted By martinw Paul I am not a FF but having attended a number of incidents which were dicey to say the least, it bugs me to see such 'under-reporting'. In my experience, people had to be dragged back from trying to help rather than standing back responding in the way that the article suggests. Whether it is the red mist or not, that is not my recollection of anyone's attitude who attended any situation at which I was present. And that included fire fighters, who were more likely to carry out controlled procedures - actually going into danger rather than going away from it - which to me as a police officer at the time looked bloody dangerous - but I did not have your training, or experience.
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#4 Posted : 02 August 2009 08:59:00(UTC)
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Posted By Andy Brazier I think it is easy to overlook the fact that this incident happened at night. What looks like a simple rescue in day time will be much different in pitch black. Obviously this is not something mentioned in the news report.
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#5 Posted : 02 August 2009 09:38:00(UTC)
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Posted By Paul T9 The thing that concerns me is the risk assessment and its justification. In my opinion the recovery of the casualty could have been carried out safely using ladders and lines. I would use a ladder down the bank and a fire fighter on a safety line with minimal risk if all necessary precautions are taken (Lashing of ladder, rescue line on casualty for removal, etc) which looks like what was initially planned by the first fire crew. Instead a crew 50 miles away was called presumably attended under blue lights so probably putting themselves at risk? Not to mention the fact that limited resources were tied up for a number of hours. What made the hazard so bad that the equipment and expertise on hand could not deal with it safely? Also it says a boat was used I would like to know how they got it in the dike, maybe using ladders and lines? Andy darkness is not normally a problem, as the fire tenders normally carry a number of portable lighting units that can be set up and the vehicle may have a mast light too.
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#6 Posted : 02 August 2009 09:41:00(UTC)
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Posted By Phil Rose I read this yesterday while having a coffee in Waitrose (all the local papers had been nabbed by others) and before I responded on the Noooooooooo thread (see www.iosh.co.uk/index.cfm...m=1&thread=46324&page=1.) I don't think that I could provide an objective opinion on the basis of what I have read, that would or which frankly could be fair on the officers involved.
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#7 Posted : 02 August 2009 10:03:00(UTC)
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Posted By Dave Merchant There's a civil case pending so AUG6 applies - this thread cannot continue.
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#8 Posted : 02 August 2009 10:11:00(UTC)
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Posted By Phil Rose Paul, if I could also suggest caution re Aug 6, something that you identified yourself when starting the post. I would have thought that you of all people would give your professional colleagues the benefit of the doubt, rather than pass judgement on the basis of newspaper report.
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#9 Posted : 02 August 2009 11:08:00(UTC)
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Posted By FAH As an ex-firefighter myself, I am always interested in reports of events that I know are an endemic part of the Firefighters [& other emegency services] normal working lives. I agree with the immediately preceding comments & do not wish to discuss this event in isolation anyway. So, may I offer a way of avoiding the application of the AUGs by suggersting that the example quoted is but one of a growing number of events that are visible examples of the way in which the emergency services have now so thoroughly adopted the idea of risk assessment without [perhaps] actually have a sufficiently thorough grasp of the actual concepts that underly risk assessment [that should get a few people going!!!]. I'm off to the secret bunker now. Frank Hallett
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#10 Posted : 02 August 2009 16:41:00(UTC)
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Posted By Messy Shaw Let's not forget this is The Mail which is as reliable as an MP's promise when it comes to being economical with the facts & spinning the truth to meet their agenda. I cannot begin to describe the many occasions where the media have reported on fires I have attended and got it all badly wrong - often causing great personal distress by their laziness. It is just impossible to rely on any of the so-called facts to be accurate here, so I will wait a more reliable source before I comment
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#11 Posted : 02 August 2009 17:08:00(UTC)
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Posted By D H Paul - will there be an FAI? That way there may be more information forthcoming. But i suggest that you push your union to get the answers to your questions. This scenario or similar will occur again in the future. You and your colleagues need the guidance on how to deal with incidents in this rapidly changing world. I can understand the lead officer stopping the rescue as in reality if you arrived over an hour after the accident and he was face down in the water he was already dead. Lead officers have to take their team safety into consideration - and in my experience, they are damned if they do and damned if they don't - hindsight is a wonderful thing! The guy at the top has to stand by his decision - and I think he should be given the respect for making that call - as he will certainly have to back it up at a later date. Dave
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#12 Posted : 02 August 2009 19:37:00(UTC)
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Posted By Paul T9 Frank any room in your secret bunker? That is just what I was trying to say, as the crew in first attendance had already formulated a rescue plan that could be carried out safely. These people aren’t novices they are front line (seen it, done it, wrote the book) and well aware of their capabilities and that of the equipment they have at hand! Was their solution so impractical that it was dangerous, that I find hard to believe. We are after all talking a drainage dyke (yes I know I had spelt it wrong the first time ‘dike’ but I had just come off night shift!) so how hard can that be? Anyway as Frank has stated has the emergency services failed to grasp the concept of the risk assessment?
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#13 Posted : 02 August 2009 21:30:00(UTC)
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Posted By Crim I don't know if the fireman's priorities have changed but when I was in the job the first priority was always to safe life. (or at least have a go). This is where H&S does actually get in the way as I am sure without the risk assessment the crew would have been down in no time at all with the casualty. There is no way of knowing if the man was alive or dead but at least they would have been seen to be having a go. In that case (and knowing only what has been reported) there should have been a man with a line around his waist sliding down the bank within minutes, he would have been safe until the rest of the crew got down by ladder. The fire appliance would have adequate lighting on board to light up the immediate area. I was involved in many rescue attempts, all quite dangerous, otherwise there would be no need! We always joked that we ran in when everyone else was running out. That is what the job is all about. The Brigade I was in for 25 years have not lost a fireman on duty since the second world war. Shame on the officer that made the decision. I hope he is now retired, if not please resign and do not take the pension.
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#14 Posted : 02 August 2009 22:48:00(UTC)
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Posted By Raymond Rapp The prima facie evidence suggests that something was amiss with this incident. Yes, I agree that darkness creates its own hazards, but surely, life saving operations require a degree of risk taking by he blue light services. It is sad if this and some other recent incidents have resulted in over zealous use of health and safety (risk assessment) which prevents those from saving a life. There are times like this that make me wonder if I chose the right career path. Ray
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#15 Posted : 03 August 2009 00:05:00(UTC)
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Posted By Crim If you carry out a risk assessment of descending a steep river bank with water at the bottom during the hours of darkness you would end with a high risk, possible fatality, and recommend that if you have to go down there to do it in daylight with specialised equipment to hand. The emergency services are there because of life threatening incidents and should be prepared to "go to the edge" in the interests of saving life. That's what they are trained for and that's why most of them are in that job.
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#16 Posted : 03 August 2009 07:53:00(UTC)
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Posted By bill strachan1 Although the media reporting may well by inaccurate and quite possibly be calculated to create an even bigger story, the sad fact is that risk assessments have not just dropped out of the sky during the last few years. As far as I am aware they have been fundamental for assessing risks from as far back as I can remember. I can still remember being taught the green cross code as a child which is a basic indivudual RA. The fact of the matter is that people who are made responsible for making quick and sometimes dangerous decisions are almost scared out of their wits by the blame culture and politically correct, soft senior management which is now rife - even in our emergency services. I cannot help but wonder how our troops in Afghanistan would cope with all the risks they take every day if they had similar senior managers scared of their own shadow.
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#17 Posted : 03 August 2009 08:37:00(UTC)
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Posted By Mark Eden Would we still be having this conversation if any of the emergency services had been injured or killed attempting to recover the unfortunate dead person. I was in the Fire Service, our creed was "we would always risk our own safety to safe a life, assess all risks and put strict safety procedures in place to recover a deceased person and not put our personal safety at risk to save property. So please don't berate the emergency services - the saying of "dammed if you do dammed if you don't" seems to be the order of the day in this particular unfortunate case.
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#18 Posted : 03 August 2009 08:48:00(UTC)
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Posted By bill strachan1 Mark, First of all are'nt you being a bit presumptious by assuming this person was already dead when the emergency services arrived and secondly I would hardly call a poor unfortunate person lying in the bottom of a drainage ditch as propery/asset damage.
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#19 Posted : 03 August 2009 09:06:00(UTC)
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Posted By Mark Eden Bill Please read fully what was written- I did not refer to a deceased person as asset or property
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#20 Posted : 03 August 2009 09:23:00(UTC)
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Posted By bill strachan1 Mark, Point taken. Getting too emotive. However the first point raised about presuming death still stands.
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#21 Posted : 03 August 2009 09:55:00(UTC)
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Posted By martinw Are we in the situation where health and safety regulations need to be means tested for applicability? I work in an office, and also go out in my car(irrelevant danger level for this post) to do my job. I write stuff and type stuff. At no time do I, by choice, deliberately endanger myself because it is expected of me due to the job which I do. But I am subject to the same regs as FFs. I am not bigging anyone up, to use the parlance, but is there a case to say that realistically, eg RIDDOR is less easily translated in situations where the risks are dynamically changing? How can you judge a failure to risk assess when the risks change by the second? Isn't that one of the reasons why the armed forces and professional sports people are not subject to the same H&S as we are?
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#22 Posted : 03 August 2009 10:30:00(UTC)
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Posted By Kenneth Patrick Extract from HSE's enformcent policy: The Coroner's primary function is usually limited to establishing: the identity of the deceased; when, where and how death occurred; and whether it is necessary to make any recommendations for action to prevent a recurrence. 4. Where it appears that one or more persons acting on behalf of the state are, or may be, in some way implicated in a death either by their actions or inaction, the state is under an obligation under Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights2 to initiate an effective public investigation by an independent body. In such circumstances, the scope of the inquest may be wider.
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#23 Posted : 03 August 2009 10:39:00(UTC)
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Posted By FAH MartinW Re your last post. Could you explain why you raised RIDDOR please? Also:- As previously identified, I was in the firefighter business - and in the area of almost civilised Essex where I spent most of my time it certainly wasn't unusual to be required to assist or retrieve all sorts of living [sometimes ex-living] beings to safety. If it was identified that there was no life to save, normally, the urgency to act was recognised as being at a much lower level. However, to ascertain that there was no urgency frequently required a series of very rapid decisions with minimal information & a range of pressures to manage. Generally, In the first instance, until we KNEW that there was no life to save, we acted as if there was a life to save. These actions were always based upon the very sound and unavoidable tenets of HSWA S2[2][c] - the requirement for "such information, instruction, training & supervision as is necessary" to work with the maximum degree of safety whilst still carrying out the job of saving life. In the current political & h&s climate however, I perceive a creep away from such active & pragmatic management of these volatile situations towards a greater desire to not make contentious decisions, to not want to be "second-guessed, & above all, not to be in a position where that someone could be prosecuted or sued. The first 2 are simply inexcusable - the 3rd is entirely understandable given that there is serious doubt by many that their employers [inc senior officers] will support them if such a situation arises. I know that if I hit the "post response" button, the storm will descend - but here goes. Frank Hallett
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#24 Posted : 03 August 2009 10:52:00(UTC)
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Posted By bill strachan1 Martin, I think your comments are spot on!!
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#25 Posted : 03 August 2009 10:53:00(UTC)
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Posted By Andrew Murdy It is easy to jump to conclusions from a newspaper story. Emotive headline, one sided reporting, 'indicative but generic' picture and the job is done. A few facts mixed with opinions and the reader's mind is made up and bad things have happened and someone is to blame. Reading this and other stories makes it clear that you can't believe what you read as an appropriate basis for making decisions about anything except the person who wrote the story.
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#26 Posted : 03 August 2009 11:02:00(UTC)
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Posted By martinw Which decries anything said about anything. Not really helpful. Frank, RIDDOR just popped into my mind. I know about the FF relevant person exclusion in the RRO, I was not referring to that or missing the point of it. But the point is still ongoing in that the law is reflecting common sense: in that those who undertake dangerous leisure activities and are injured are less likely to recieve damages as our learned friends are going towards a serves you right attitude. What would be the implications if that position infiltrates attitudes towards the more dangerous occupations?
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#27 Posted : 03 August 2009 12:16:00(UTC)
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Posted By Andrew Murdy @ Martin Not really - you just need to be careful making assumptions based on a story written from a source with a vested interest (relative with a claim most likely). On the face of it, stories of this nature are 'risk assessment stopped someone doing something so I lost something or someone precious'. In fact, the story could be 'brave decision prevented further loss of life' or 'nightmare of decision making'. In the US, more firefighters lose their lives than anywhere else (source NCIS or some such TV show). Apparently because they jump in and then think (same source). I could believe this fact (anything prefaced with 'In America' or 'On the Internet' is always a fact), taking a storytellers view point, or I could do a bit more digging and understand what is happening out there. Whatever happens, making a decision about the effectiveness of health and safety legisation based on media coverage is hardly going to be valid, scientific or appropriate.
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#28 Posted : 03 August 2009 12:20:00(UTC)
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Posted By Raymond Rapp It is my view that health and safety law and specifically HSWA was never intended to include the work covered by the emergency services when responding to an incident. The dynamic nature of some incidents do not lend themselves to formal assessments. However, recent prosecutions by the CPS and HSE of Met Commissioners (Stevens and Condon) and the prosecution of the Met in the Menezes case have done our cause no good whatsoever. Is it a case of reaping what you sow? Ray
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#29 Posted : 03 August 2009 12:31:00(UTC)
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Posted By martinw Andrew I thought that I simply asking a question. I did not make any assumptions. FFs do indeed carry out dangerous and risky activities as part of their jobs. My question about the efficacy of H&S legislation is simply that: I haven't even looked at the article.....
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#30 Posted : 03 August 2009 14:17:00(UTC)
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Posted By bill strachan1 Andrew, Not quite sure where you are going with more FF killed in their line of duty in the US. Sure there is bound to be some exaggerations and little fibs. But the fact is a person was left lying in a drainage ditch with a relatively low level of water in the bottom. It wasnt quick sand or a raging torrent. I am far from an expert but the RA for me would have been secure a trained and competent FF to a rope with a harness and lower him down into the ditch and turn the guy over to take his face out of the water. After that the rest should part of what they are so well trained to do.
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#31 Posted : 04 August 2009 07:53:00(UTC)
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Posted By Andrew Murdy And that is the issue. A few lines, slanted to support a position, and we can make a risk assessment. I have no idea what the area was like, what the lighting levels available where, how stable the bank was, how deep the water was, how much and what type of equipment was available, etc. from the story. All I know is what I've been told by a journo reporting on the story and his source is pursuing a claim. Professionally, how can I make any assessment of risk based on the information we have available?
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#32 Posted : 04 August 2009 08:12:00(UTC)
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Posted By Phil Rose Andrew - I can't help but agree with you,as per my post somewhere above. I think it is unfair that people are making assessments and judgements on the basis of such limited information. There seems to be an increasing number of posts with a link to a 'news' story Freon the Mail or Sun that results in endless discussion based on the flimsiest of facts. That seems unfair to me and doesn't help any of the people involved in such situations.
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