Yorkshire Post

Inquiry after fire crew is sent to wrong address in emergency call

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AN INVESTIGAT­ION has been launched after North Yorkshire fire crews were sent to the wrong address after an emergency call had been redirected to a control room around 400 miles away in Cornwall.

As a result, fire engines from Harrogate fire station took nearly half an hour to reach a fire in Killinghal­l after initially arriving at the wrong destinatio­n and then having to check where they should be – which was 2.5 miles away.

The mistake has prompted concerns over an agreement between North Yorkshire and Cornwall Fire Services to handle each other’s emergency calls if one control room cannot cope with the volume of calls. North Yorkshire Fire Brigades Union said it was fortunate the incident, which happened on Wednesday morning, involved a car on fire at an industrial unit rather than a house fire with people trapped inside.

FBU secretary Steve Howley said: “What should have taken crews between six and eight minutes to arrive at, resulted in the eventual attendance being 25 minutes after the initial call.

“This is completely unacceptab­le and something we have raised concerns about recently. Staff shortages in our control room are at dangerous levels, with our control operators placed in untenable positions at times and the only option to divert 999 calls to Cornwall.”

The FBU said the caller gave an accurate post code and stated the name of the business park they were on. She made two further calls asking where the fire engines were. Mr Howley added: “The health and wellbeing of our control staff, firefighte­rs and members of the public is being ignored by the Chief Fire Officer as he and his senior managers have failed to address the concerns we have repeatedly raised.”

North Yorkshire area manager Carl Boasman said: “We are aware of an incident where appliances attended an incorrect address and this is currently under investigat­ion to establish the cause and to fully understand the circumstan­ces around it. It’s a joint investigat­ion with Cornwall, as we would do with any incidents that arise.”

The scheme to share control room services began last summer.

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