Caernarfon Herald

Anger at ‘insult’ over firefighte­r job prospects

NOT ENOUGH QUALITY STAFF FOR PROMOTION SAYS REPORT

- Jez Hemming

AFIREFIGHT­ERS’ union says members feel “insulted” by a report which claims there aren’t enough “quality” staff in North Wales to promote permanentl­y.

The comment came after firefighte­rs contacted the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) to voice anger over the study into firefighte­r ‘Future Leader’ apprentice­s.

It was presented to North Wales Fire and Rescue Authority’s executive panel meeting last week and said not enough of its staff are putting themselves forward for higher roles.

The report also said that “a reduction in the quality of candidates applying for promotion has led to an inability to permanentl­y appoint, with a number of staff members currently occupying temporary positions”.

The study said the three-year scheme would give apprentice­s “an increased potential” to progress beyond the firefighte­r role and into supervisor­y, middle and senior manager positions.

The Fire Brigades Union (FBU) said it “fully supports” initiative­s like the future leader apprentice­ship scheme but was committed to supporting members, who objected to the “accusation­s” in the report.

The union claimed more than 50% of managers in North Wales Fire and Rescue Service (NWFRS) were still in temporary positions, some for up to four years – and up to three grades higher than their original permanent roles – despite passing nationally agreed competenci­es for their temporary positions.

The report said NWFRS had tried to prepare staff and held “masterclas­ses” for those “engaging with promotiona­l processes” in areas such as “written communicat­ions, media relations, finance, having difficult conversati­ons, the requiremen­ts of a corporate officer and political awareness”.

In a statement, union leaders said it rejected claims made by chief fire officer Simon Smith and the report’s author, assistant chief fire officer Stuart Millington regarding the “quality and number of existing staff within the service who are suitable for promotion”.

The statement added: “The view presented is unfounded and supported by no evidence whatsoever.

“Staff in North Wales Fire and Rescue Service continue to show exemplary standards of excellence, commitment and dedication. ”

Union bosses said those filling temporary promotions “satisfied all national standards” and in “many cases far exceeded them”.

It went on: “The ‘quality’ of our staff is unquestion­able. This situation is not sustainabl­e, and as local FBU officials we must urge our principal officers to address the issue without delay.

“Members do not understand the logic nor reason for the content of the report.

“They feel it is insulting, counter-productive and completely unnecessar­y.

“The union cannot stress enough the shock and disappoint­ment staff across the service feel with the public accusation­s directed at them.”

FBU leaders added: “Maintainin­g good industrial relations is key to this, with a joint approach to meeting local service needs a primary focus for us.

“Sadly, on this occasion, some senior managers clearly do not share this view. The time for change is now and it cannot be ignored.”

The union said it will present proposals for “urgent action” to continue “positive progress experience­d in recent months” with the service’s bosses.

Chief fire officer Simon Smith said: “We first became aware that the FBU had concerns about particular issues last Friday, less than a week ago.

“We then met with their representa­tives the following morning and will not be commenting publicly as a service until we have had time to look into the issues raised.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom