Yorkshire Post

Warning of ‘horrifying’ fatal fire total

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FIREFIGHTE­RS’ LEADERS have described new figures showing an increase in fires and fatalities as “horrifying”.

Fire and rescue services attended more than 170,500 fires in England in the year to last September, an increase of nine per cent on the previous year.

The number of fire-related fatalities increased from 253 to 346, including 71 from the Grenfell Tower tragedy.

There were almost 3,300 non-fatal casualties requiring hospital treatment, up by 138 on the previous 12 months, official figures showed.

The fire service attended more than 566,000 incidents, a three per cent increase, with almost a third for fires, a similar number for other incidents and the rest for false alarms.

Matt Wrack, general secretary of the Fire Brigades Union (FBU), said yesterday: “All we hear from government when they attempt justificat­ion of butchering the fire and rescue service is that ‘fires are down’ – this is now clearly no longer a claim they can make.

“They wrote off last year’s rise in fires as a ‘blip’, what will they put it down to this year?”

Mr Wrack added: “It isn’t complicate­d, the fire and rescue service is cut to the bone, and the result is more people dying in fires because crews can no longer respond promptly and in sufficient numbers to tackle fires profession­ally, quickly and effectivel­y.

“How many more rises in these worrying figures before they join up the dots? How many more people are going to have to die?”

The Home Office said the number of fires was down by about half compared with a decade ago.

The total number of incidents had been on a downward trend for a decade, but had increased in recent years.

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