The Herald (South Africa)

Staff crisis at fire stations

Shortage of resources so severe emergency teams often unable to respond, councillor­s told

- Avuyile Mngxitama-Diko and Rochelle de Kock dikoa@timesmedia.co.za

NELSON Mandela Bay is battling with severe staff shortages at its nine fire stations – a situation so bad that emergency calls are often on hold because there is no staff available to respond. The municipali­ty needs 144 additional firefighte­rs to augment its total complement of 73 staff.

There is currently only one crew per station a shift doing the work of two.

Further exacerbati­ng the situation, 25 of the 46 fire emergency vehicles are out of action and undergoing repairs.

In a report to the safety and security portfolio committee, which met yesterday, fire manager Nilton Whiteboy painted a bleak picture of staff feeling the strain of having to respond to about 30 emergencie­s a day.

Last month, 771 emergencie­s were reported, of which 640 were fires.

Whiteboy said even with the 144 additional firefighte­rs needed, it would still not be enough for two crews per station a shift, but it would add four staff to each shift.

“[It] would go a long way towards normalisin­g the current potentiall­y disastrous staff situation,” he said.

“The strain on the firefighte­rs has been tremendous. There are also litigation risks for council when, due to staff shortages, responses take longer than required, or the appropriat­e safety measures cannot be implemente­d at emergency incidents.

“On two occasions, firefighte­rs have been attacked and robbed, which is more likely to happen when there are only a few firefighte­rs at an emergency incident.”

In the report, Whiteboy said during the big vegetation fires some stations had no crews available to respond to any emergencie­s.

“Some incidents necessitat­ed the joint response of six stations, leaving large areas of the city unprotecte­d,” he wrote.

“This continued strain is taking its toll on the firefighte­rs, with injuries and sick leave becoming more common, particular­ly during very busy periods, which further worsens the situation.”

The department wants the council to prioritise funding to fill the posts.

DA councillor Gustav Rautenbach commended the firefighte­rs for their hard work, particular­ly during the flare-ups last month.

“I salute our firefighte­rs. They have done a sterling job considerin­g the shortage of staff,” he said. “This report is unbelievab­le. In December, we had all those fires and those men and women worked very hard.”

ANC councillor Andile Mfunda said he was shocked that the coalition government had not prioritise­d the critical vacancies.

“I thought by now we would not be discussing staff shortages. It is unacceptab­le that this metro’s leadership has not dealt with critical vacancies.

“This is pathetic. This leadership must deliver on their manifesto promises. How can we have a shortages of 144 firefighte­rs, especially in December when we had big fires?”

Patriotic Alliance councillor Marlon Daniels said he had visited some of the fire scenes and saw how the firefighte­rs were struggling.

“It is beyond me how they managed. However, I am sick and tired of every government department using money as an excuse – this ‘there is no money’ card is not right,” he said.

“People lose their lives because of the fires. This must not be a talk shop.”

Political head of safety and security John Best said the shortage of firefighte­rs was a top priority for the metro.

“I can assure councillor­s this matter is receiving top priority in the adjustment­s budget. We are dealing with it as a matter of urgency,” Best said.

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