Bath Chronicle

Councillor­s back fire chief after damning report

- Adam Postans Local democracy reporter adam.postans@reachplc.com

Councillor­s have united behind Avon’s chief fire officer despite a damning government report.

Inspectors gave the service the worst possible rating of “inadequate” in four of 11 areas – including its core duty of responding to emergencie­s.

His Majesty’s Inspectora­te of Constabula­ry and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) also found some staff used sexist and inappropri­ate language and “disguised this as banter”.

That was despite years of efforts by bosses to tackle cultural problems, including a new zero-tolerance policy, after previous inspection­s exposed “deepseated” misogyny and homophobia.

Chief Fire Officer (CFO) Simon Shilton told an emergency meeting of Avon Fire Authority (AFA) that he was “heartbroke­n” by those findings.

HMICFRS’S report, published last month, raised “serious concerns” over Avon Fire & Rescue Service’s (AFRS’S) ability to keep residents – and firefighte­rs – safe.

They concluded the organisati­on’s mobilisati­on system, which records informatio­n and dispatches crews to incidents, “isn’t reliable and crashes during 999 calls, which results in the public receiving a slower response to emergencie­s”.

Inspectors have moved the organisati­on into enhanced monitoring called the “engaged” phase.

But cross-party councillor­s on the AFA committee overwhelmi­ngly backed fire chiefs and agreed with CFO Shilton that he “does not recognise” the service described in the report.

South Gloucester­shire councillor Ben Nutland told CFO Shilton at the meeting: “I fully support you and the senior leadership team, but the report is extremely disappoint­ing. It’s frankly not the service I recognise.”

Cllr Nutland said of the latest report: “This is not a situation we can’t salvage. We are here to scrutinise you to make sure it improves but I believe it will and you have the right team to do it. You have our full backing and we believe in you.”

Bristol councillor Steve Smith said: “This is difficult reading in difficult times. The mood of the room is that we are behind you and your senior team in sorting this out.”

CFO Shilton said: “This is quite a damaging report for us and it’s quite upsetting to read, frustratin­g to read, which gives the indication that there is much work to do across a wide range of areas in our service and as such this is about incrementa­l improvemen­ts.

“I am deeply saddened by the findings despite the efforts of many staff across the service.

“Undoubtedl­y this has an impact on all of our organisati­on and all of our staff. I do not believe this is truly reflective of the reality of our organisati­on.

“Neverthele­ss it has identified some areas we need to improve on, which I accept and take on the challenge.”

He said significan­t work had already taken place to respond to the recommenda­tions of the previous round of inspection­s.

The chief said two “accelerate­d causes for concern” were raised immediatel­y after the inspection.

CFO Shilton said all actions had been completed to fix the mobilisati­on software’s technical problems but that the service “never failed to mobilise an appliance” as a result of the problems, which affected individual consoles and not the whole system.

He told the meeting that the other accelerate­d cause for concern – failures in how AFRS gathers risk informatio­n to protect firefighte­rs, residents and property during an emergency – would take longer to solve but was being addressed.

CFO Shilton said the report highlighte­d two further causes for concern, including the service’s culture, along with 31 areas for improvemen­t, with action plans being finalised in response to the findings.

He said: “The culture cause for concern is particular­ly disappoint­ing and frustratin­g as much work has been undertaken since round two inspection­s including the zero-tolerance position, policy changes, independen­t reporting and confidenti­al reporting lines.

“During my leadership I’ve been clear on my commitment to cultural improvemen­t where staff are able to be the best version of themselves. I’ve also been clear that culture cannot be solved overnight and it requires a persistent and consistent commitment to establish a healthy workplace.

“Since the release of my zerotolera­nce position I’ve utilised external legal HR investigat­ors resulting in disciplina­ry sanctions, including dismissals from the service on the basis of behaviour. When I saw the outcome of the investigat­ion it was personally heartbreak­ing.

“I am particular­ly heartbroke­n by the assessment of culture. Of all of the work we have put in across the organisati­on, the commitment of our staff to be a healthy workplace has been unwavering.

“So to move from ‘good’ to ‘inadequate’ with a ‘cause for concern,’ I really want to understand how that has happened. I really want to get to grips with that so we can respond positively to the findings, and I know this is not a reflection of Avon Fire & Rescue Service that I work in.

“But as heartbreak­ing as it is, there have been findings and we will respond positively.”

❝ During my leadership I’ve been clear on my commitment to cultural improvemen­t where staff are able to be the best version of themselves. I’ve also been clear that culture cannot be solved overnight and it requires a persistent and consistent commitment to establish a healthy workplace. Chief Fire Officer (CFO) Simon Shilton

 ?? ?? Chief Fire Officer Simon Shilton
Chief Fire Officer Simon Shilton

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