What gets recommended gets done: State of Fire #2

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arch was a busy month for fire announcements, with the Home Office publishing the long-awaited review of police and crime commissioners as well as the response to the fire safety consultation that included how to legislate for some of the Grenfell Inquiry recommendations. HMICFRS added to the pile by publishing State of Fire and Rescue 2020, its annual assessment of fire and rescue services. With the opportunity to talk to Sir Tom Winsor the day after publication, it is a case of what to focus on when there is only 30 minutes available. That is why the conversation centred on the recommendations, not because they are new, but because they are unchanged from 2019 and the links with the rest of the recent announcements makes them even more important than before.

Too Many Services Elsewhere in State of Fire, Sir Tom states that 45 fire and rescue services is too many. There are, by way of contrast, 39 police forces in England. Sir Tom said: “There is a perfectly valid case for simplification. It is also my view that there are too many police forces. The case for merging police forces now is not a strong one because there are far too many things occupying the police’s attention.” He said that having observed reorganisations in other sectors: “When you reorganise you bleed.” By this he meant that the distraction of mergers results in leaders looking inwards and not outwards at the delivery of services to the public.

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State of Fire #2

“Making the areas coterminous would have obvious administrative benefits,” he said. And this is fine where police and fire have the same boundaries but that is not the case throughout England. There is a real problem in the south west where police and fire just do not match up. Tearing them apart simply to align from a governance point of view or in pursuit of political doctrine would be a hard sell to local people and as Sir Tom said, there is lots more to concern leaders in fire and rescue services. None of this is likely to deter the government: PFCCs are the way forward. There will be an almighty row about this change, as members of fire and rescue authorities and the Local Government Association will seek to retain their position. Sir Tom is remarkably sanguine on this point. “Of course, there are rows about these things. When people lose power, they get upset. If it is the will of Parliament, they will just have to get with the programme.” Quite. The position of HMICFRS is clearly set out in State of Fire: “Evidence-based, thorough analysis and assessment of performance, arrived at in fair processes, is the right of every public service.”

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The second edition of State of Fire and Rescue was published in March. Political Editor Catherine Levin spoke to HM Chief Inspector Sir Tom Winsor about progress with the recommendations and tried to figure out what will end up in the promised Fire Reform White Paper

Union Dispute It is hard to reconcile that with the response by Matt Wrack, General Secretary of the Fire Brigades Union, who tweeted the day after publication: ‘This report is the latest in a long line of attempts to attack the right of firefighters to be represented by a trade union and to roll back hard-won terms and conditions’. Sharing this quote with Sir Tom, he said that in the three and a half years he has been Chief Inspector of Fire and Rescue, he had never had any communication with Matt Wrack despite offering to do so. Zoë Billingham was keen to stress that HMICFRS does engage with the FBU, through consultation on its inspection methodology and extensively through staff surveys. The response by Matt after the publication of State of Fire came not long after his furious tweets about HMICFRS’s Covid-19 inspection reports, saying that he had not seen the reports until they were leaked by a journalist. Zoë said that she had personally briefed Matt and his

“When PFCCs get fire, they should by then be quite accustomed to respecting operational independence” 20  |  April 2021  |  www.fire–magazine.com


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