The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Portable plan is revealed for control room

Move necessary as hub will not be ready

- gareth McPherson poltical reporter gmcpherson@thecourier.co.uk

Emergency operators in Dundee will receive 999 calls in portable buildings for five months, the fire service has revealed.

Scottish Fire and Rescue Service is closing control rooms to create a 999 regional hub in the city, but it will not be ready until March next year.

Dundee control room staff will be in temporary accommodat­ion from September 28 while the new facility is upgraded.

There will be closures of control rooms in Aberdeen and Inverness, with staff moving to what the fire service calls “hi-spec modular accommodat­ion” ahead of their transfer to the hub.

The fire service has sought to allay concerns that the temporary buildings will affect the quality of service and said concerns over a lack of local knowledge among staff will not be an issue.

Alasdair Hay, the SFRS’ chief officer, said: “The public can rest assured that there will be no change to the outstandin­g service that we provide, and we will continue to attend every 999 call ahead of the launch of our new Operations Control at Dundee in March.”

A fire service spokesman said that operations control staff will “undertake training and pool their knowledge on the particular risks and geography of each area”.

Liam McArthur, justice spokesman for the Scottish Liberal Democrats, said staff working in temporary buildings is “hardly what was promised” when the fire service said it would centralise operations into a state of the art facility.

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