Essex County Fire and Rescue Service

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Essex County Fire and Rescue Service
Operational area
Country England
County Essex
Address Kelvedon Park, Witham
Agency overview
Established 1 April 1948 (1948-04-01)
Employees 1,640
Facilities and equipment
Stations 50
Website
Official website

Essex County Fire and Rescue Service (ECFRS) is the statutory fire and rescue service for the county of Essex in the east of England, and is one of the largest fire services in the country, covering an area of 366,980 hectares and a population of over 1.7 million people.[1]

The service attends around 20,000 emergency incidents per year, mostly fires (including 2,598 'primary' and 3,134 'secondary' fires in 2011/12) and traffic collisions (1,151 in 2011/12). During the same period, the service mobilised to 6,290 false alarms and 306 malicious hoax calls. Other common incidents dealt with include lift releases (421 in 2011/12), effecting entry (409), flooding (310) and animal rescues (224).[2]

ECFRS employs 1,605 staff, comprising 800 full-time firefighters, 495 retained firefighters, 46 control personnel and 265 support staff.[3]

There are 50 fire stations in Essex, 12 of which are wholetime and generally located in the more densely populated areas; 34 are retained and four are day-crewed.

Major risks covered include Stansted and Southend airports, Harwich seaport, Lakeside shopping centre, Coryton oil refinery, power stations and docks at Tilbury and part of the M25 and M11 motorways and A12 road.

As well as attending fires, traffic collisions and other rescue operations, ECFRS provides emergency response to hazardous materials incidents and has an urban search and rescue (USAR) team of officers with special training and equipment to conduct rescues from collapsed buildings and enclosed spaces. Their resources include a search dog trained to locate people trapped in rubble. Another primary role of the service is preventative community safety work; in 2010 ECFRS fitted over 7,000 smoke alarms in houses across the county.[1]

Organisation

ECFRS's headquarters is located in Kelvedon. The Service is divided into two Area Commands:[4]

  1. East Area Command (Rayleigh Weir)
  2. West Area Command (Harlow)

The Chief Fire Officer is David Johnson, since July 2005.

The Emergency Operational Fire Control is situated in Hutton. 46 control staff handle approximately 500,000 calls each year, including over 60,000 999 emergency calls. The control staff also carry out incident co-ordination, appliance mobilisation and movements to ensure strategic fire cover, movement of personnel and advanced call handling to give life protecting advice via the telephone. Radio communications are made between incidents and Fire Control and control staff liaise with other emergency services and provide additional resources when requested by firefighting personnel. Emergency calls are handled in an average of 54 seconds from the time of answering to the time of dispatching the fire crew.

There are five firefighter training centres, located in Basildon, Chelmsford, Orsett, Witham and Wethersfield.[4]

The Service workshop is in Lexden, where the operational fleet of 70 frontline fire appliances and 25 specialist appliances are maintained, and the reserve fleet of spare appliances are stored.

Appliances

Essex County Fire and Rescue Service Rescue Pump
A 2010-registered Rescue Pump

ECFRS has the following fire appliances in operation:

  • 50 Rescue Pumps: the standard firefighting vehicle mobilised to all emergency calls. These appliances are equipped with a high-pressure two-stage main pump also capable of making foam via an onboard foam inductor system, two high-pressure hose reels, a set of rescue ladders, a light portable fire pump, four breathing apparatus sets, two spare breathing air cylinders and hydraulic rescue equipment, as well as other miscellaneous tools.[5]
  • 20 Water Tenders: similar to the Rescue Pump except with less emphasis on rescue equipment and greater water capacity.
A Rescue Tender assigned to Grays station pictured at an incident

In addition, there are a number of specialised appliances in operation:

  • 5 Aerial Ladder Platforms (ALP):[1] extendible ladder platforms with rescue cages, stretchers and additional lighting, these vehicles provide high-level access and firefighting capability, with a vertical reach of almost 100 ft, almost 80 ft sideways, and up to 55 ft below ground level.[5][6]
  • 4 Light Water Tenders (Steyr Pinzgauers) (LWrT)
  • 3 Foam Tenders[1] (FT): introduced in 2011, these new units are cheaper to maintain and easier to use than the previous dated vehicles, and can provide state-of-the-art foam proportioning equipment for transport incidents and refinery fires.[3]
  • 3 Fireboats (Fbt)
  • 2 Rescue Tenders (RT): these lorries are fitted with forklift trucks, enhanced rescue gear including vehicle stabilisation and heavy-lift air bags, specialist casualty stretchers, casualty stabilisation and first aid equipment, an inflatable boat and salvage gear.[5]
  • 2 Control Units[1] (CU)
  • 2 Water Bowsers[1] (WrB)
  • 1 Hose Layer (HL)
  • 1 Animal Rescue Unit (ARU): introduced in 2011, the ARU is based on an all-terrain Unimog chassis and is fitted with a Hiab crane capable of extending up to 13.7 m and lifting weights of up to 3,250 kg. The vehicle is also equipped with three 'pods' containing all the equipment that crews might need to carry out specialist animal rescues; its crew is specially trained in large animal rescue and welfare.[7]
  • 2 Flood Response Units (FRU): two additional FRUs will be added to the fleet in the future.[3]
  • 1 Welfare Module (WM)
  • 1 Environmental Module (EM): to help crews contain pollutants at incidents, this unit carries a wide range of equipment including pumps, oil and chemical absorbent materials, booms, drain-blockers and over-drums for containing leaking chemical containers. It was launched in July 2011.[8]

The service is also reviewing requirements for a breathing apparatus tender.[1] The standard appliances (Rescue Pumps and Water Tenders) are crewed by at least four and as many as six firefighters, while specialist units such as the Aerial Ladder Platforms and Rescue Tenders are crewed by a minimum of two.[9]

USAR appliances, based at Lexden, include:

  • 1 Incident Response Unit (based at Chelmsford) (IRU)
  • 1 High Volume Pump (HVP)
  • 5 prime movers with various demountable pods
  • 1 Search Dog Unit
  • 1 USAR personnel carrier
  • 1 Detection, Identification and Monitioring (DIM) vehicle

The service's driving school is at Chelmsford, and is home to three emergency fire appliance driving (EFAD) pumps and two multi-purpose driver training lorries.

Training centres at Wethersfield and Witham each have two designated training pumps.

Fire stations

Orsett fire station

This is a complete list of Essex's 50 fire stations, the duty system, appliances allocated to them, and number of emergency callouts in 2008:[3][9]

Station Number Duty system Standard appliances Specialist appliances Callouts in 2008
Basildon W52 Wholetime 2 1 (CU) 3,121
Billericay W68 Retained 1 1 (LWrT) 379
Braintree W78 Retained 2 0 899
Brentwood W51 Wholetime 2 0 1,456
Brightlingsea E20 Retained 1 0 105
Burnham E43 Retained 1 1 (LWrT) 224
Canvey Island W54 Retained[10] 2 0 912
Chelmsford E34 Wholetime 2 3 (ALP, IRU, WrB) 2,462
Clacton E12 Wholetime 2 1 (CU) 1,347
Coggeshall E24 Retained 1 0 233
Colchester E10 Wholetime 2 2 (ALP, RT) 3,058
Corringham W66 Retained 2 0 437
Dovercourt E11 Day crewed 2 1 (FRU) 338
Epping W89 Retained 1 1 (DIM) 365
Frinton E18 Retained 2 0 281
Grays W50 Wholetime 2 2 (ALP, RT) 2,626
Great Baddow E33 Day crewed 1 0 517
Great Dunmow W87 Day crewed 1 1 (LWrT) 700
Halstead W81 Retained 2 1 (WrB) 445
Harlow W70 Wholetime 2 1 (ALP) 2,794
Hawkwell E47 Retained 1 0 187
Ingatestone W67 Retained 1 0 285
Leaden Roding W88 Retained 1 0 102
Leigh E31 Wholetime 1 1 (FRU) 1,412
Loughton W72 Wholetime 2 0 1,350
Maldon E46 Retained 2 3 (FT, WM, EU) 514
Manningtree E17 Retained 1 1 (LWrT) 281
Newport W84 Retained 1 0 297
Old Harlow W82 Retained 1 0 279
Ongar W71 Retained 1 0 237
Orsett W55 Wholetime 2 1 (FT) 1,318
Rayleigh Weir E35 Wholetime 2 1 (HL) New station
Rochford E49 Retained 1 0 214
Saffron Walden W85 Retained 2 0 553
Shoeburyness E42 Retained 1 0 406
Sible Hedingham W80 Retained 1 0 74
South Woodham Ferrers E32 Day crewed 1 1 (ARU) 330
Southend E30 Wholetime 2 1 (ALP) 3,301
Stansted W83 Retained 1 2 (FT, 4x4) 741
Thaxted W86 Retained 1 0 156
Tillingham E44 Retained 1 0 55
Tiptree E23 Retained 1 0 179
Tollesbury E45 Retained 1 0 56
Waltham Abbey W73 Day crewed 1 2 [FRU, Fbt] 375
Weeley E19 Retained 1 0 205
West Mersea E22 Retained 1 0 110
Wethersfield W79 Retained 1 0 68
Wickford W69 Retained 1 0 460
Witham W25 Retained 2 0 596
Wivenhoe E21 Retained 1 0 271

Southend fire station is also home to the UK's first dedicated Young Firefighters' Centre, opened in July 2010.[11]

Urban search and rescue team

State-of-the-art equipment, multi-purpose vehicles, a search and rescue dog and a purpose-built base staffed with a highly trained and experienced team comprise the county's urban search and rescue (USAR) team.

The team is equipped to rescue victims trapped in the rubble of collapsed buildings, or major transport accidents, for example. They are able to locate and safely extract trapped person, and can shore up unstable buildings so that firefighters can continue with rescue operations.

The USAR team are equipped with prime movers, specialist hook-lift vehicles that can be loaded with one of five different equipment pods, depending on what situation the team are going to face. These pods include hose layers and high-volume pumps, technical rescue, timber for shoring up unstable structures, and even a multi-purpose skid loader that can access tight spaces, explore voids, and move heavy loads of debris.

Following the September 11 attacks new risks were identified for which rescue services would need to be better prepared, and the British government responded with the announcement that USAR units were to be established throughout the country. The Lexden base became the UK's first such facility.

ECFRS was chosen as one of the 17 strategically suitable services partly because it already had 14 officers trained in urban rescue, members of the UK Fire Service Safety & Rescue Team who were part of the rescue effort that was sent to Bam in Iran after it was hit by a major earthquake in December 2003 where they helped in the search for victims amongst the ruins of the ancient city.

The station commander at Lexden, a specialist co-ordinator of search and rescue operations, was also sent with the EU Civil Protection Mechanism to Haiti in January 2010 after a major earthquake struck the country.

In February 2011, six ECFRS firefighters, including two from the USAR unit at Lexden, joined the UK's International Search and Rescue (ISAR) team sent to assist with rescue efforts in New Zealand's second city Christchurch after an earthquake hit the region.[12]

Formed in 1992, the UK's ISAR team comprises specialist search and rescue officers drawn from 13 brigades who are on call 24 hours a day. The ECFRS team's primary role is urban search and rescue but it has also trained and involved in water rescue and working at height.

Cross-county assistance

ECFRS assisted in the emergency response to floods in Oxfordshire in 2007, where seven firefighters from the Swift Water Rescue team helped rescue victims trapped by the floods with a specialist fireboat.

Essex was also one of 16 brigades called in to attend the Buncefield oil depot fire near Hemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire, in December 2005. Fire appliances from Orsett, Hadleigh, Harlow, and foam appliances from Grays, Maldon and Epping assisted in operations at the largest ever blaze in peacetime Britain.

See also

Other emergency services:

References

External links