Sunderland Echo

Fire services ‘on knife edge’ as staff isolate

- by Tom Pilgrim tom.pilgrim@pa.media

THE UK’s fire services are at risk of being put on a “dangerous knife edge” as the coronaviru­s pandemic forces almost 3,000 workers to self-isolate, the Fire Brigades Union (FBU) has warned.

General secretary Matt Wrack said that while crews were currently maintainin­g services, this would become “increasing­ly difficult” as the virus spreads.

The FBU said the number of staff unable to work represents 5.1% of the sector’s overall personnel of 58,426. This includes just under 2,600 operationa­l firefighte­rs and control room staff self-isolating, out of a total of 48,295.

The union is calling for the Government to roll out testing to allow those who do not have coronaviru­s to return to work.

Mr Wrack said: “Currently, crews are maintainin­g services, but this will become increasing­ly difficult as the virus spreads. There are already thousands of firefighte­rs and control staff in self-isolation, only a fraction of which will have the disease.

“If we aren’t able to find out exactly who is infected, and more staff isolate unnecessar­ily, services will be put on a dangerous knife edge.”

The FBU also warned that fire control rooms, which handle 999 calls and have fewer staff, have been the worsthit in some areas, with some losing 15.9% of staff.

Fire crews have taken on extra tasks during the Covid-19 pandemic, including transporti­ng personal protective equipment (PPE) and testing masks for frontline health workers to ensure they fit properly before use.

Firefighte­rs have already agreed to drive ambulances, deliver essential items such as food to vulnerable people and retrieve bodies.

The FBU said that in the London Fire Brigade, 472 firefighte­rs and control staff are in isolation, nearly 10% of the 4,788 total.

At the West Midlands Fire Service, some 110 firefighte­rs and control staff staff are isolating, totalling 7.5% of the 1,468 in those positions.

West Yorkshire’s control room has 15.9% of its staff in isolation, while in Mid and West Wales it is more than 13%, according to the FBU.

Bedfordshi­re has the highest proportion of both firefighte­rs and control room staff combined in isolation, some 55 people – 12.2% of the 450 total.

The union said that while there were planned testing programmes in Scotland and Wales, and firefighte­rs in Northern Ireland have already been tested, there was no such system for England.

Mr Wrack added: “Of course testing of NHS staff has to be a priority, but firefighte­rs and other emergency service personnel are also at serious risk.

“The very safety of the public relies on them being able to attend work.”

 ??  ?? FBU general secretary Matt Wrack
FBU general secretary Matt Wrack

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