Portsmouth News

New Year honours for lifeboat volunteer

BEM reward for decades of service

- By EMILY JESSICA TURNER The News emily.turner@thenews.co.uk

A LIFEBOAT volunteer from Langstone who has spent nearly three decades saving lives across the Solent coast has been awarded a British Empire Medal – and says volunteeri­ng is ‘a way of life’.

Hamble Lifeboat manager Stephen Emery, 69, has been named in the 2022 New Years Honours List, receiving a medal for his services to maritime safety.

Steve, who worked as an electronic­s engineer before retiring five years ago, said: ‘I started with Hamble Lifeboat as a crewman in 1996 - I had done some sailing and knew a bit about boats, but found out very quickly how little I did know.

‘I did some training with the lifeboat service and became a coxswain after a few years.

‘I remained as a coxswain for 19 years until I thought it was a younger man’s game and took on the role of operations manager and as a trustee as a charity.

‘I oversee the fundraisin­g - we have a team of capable people, and I’m responsibl­e for the operationa­l side.

‘I’m still fairly hands-on.’ From 1993, Steve spent three years at the HM Coastguard radio desk, helping to co-ordinate rescues, before moving to Hayling Coastguard.

‘I did that in parallel with Hamble Lifeboat’, he explained.

Thousands of people have been assisted by the Hamble Lifeboat team during Steve’s time as a volunteer.

He said: ‘2021 was the busiest year for some time - we did 122 incidents. That involved approximat­ely 200 people in terms of the assistance provided.

‘Over the last 25 years, the lifeboat’s been tasked to 110-120 incidents a year involving a few hundred people.

‘We have a very good crew.’ The lifeboat team helps people across central Solent and Southampto­n waters, and the Rivers Hamble, Itchen, and Test.

‘Hamble Lifeboat is an independen­t lifeboat, it’s not part of the RNLI, so we get involved in fundraisin­g and aspects of running a charity as well as doing rescue work which is primarily what we’re there for,’ Steve said.

A resident of Langstone for 30 years, Steve, who lives with his wife Sue, added: ‘It’s become a way of life, having been involved in search and rescue for so many years - it causes you to look at things in a slightly different way.

‘Most people don’t think twice about it until something untoward happens. We’re always there to help.’

 ?? ?? AWARD Stephen Emery has been awarded a BEM
AWARD Stephen Emery has been awarded a BEM

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