PROTOCOLS SEALS COUNTY ENVIRONMENTAL EMERGENCY RESPONSE

Environmental Panorama
London – UK
May of 2005

 

19/05/2005 - The emergency response to incidents in Leicestershire posing a threat to the environment has now been streamlined thanks to a protocol signed on 20 March 2005 by Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service (LFRS) and the Environment Agency.

The protocol formalises the close working arrangements that already exist between the two organisations. It covers issues such as training and funding as well as operational responsibilities. Legislative changes arising from the new Fire and Rescue Services Act 2004 reflect the importance of Environmental Protection and the Fire and Rescue Services role in the area.

LFRS’ Chief Fire and Rescue Officer, Dave Webb and Mark Sitton-Kent, the Environment Area Manager for the Lower Trent Area, will sign the protocol on Friday 20 May 2005 at 14:00hrs at Coalville Fire and Rescue Station, Broad Street, Coalville.

Under the protocol, LFRS will notify the Environment Agency at an early stage of incidents and, through the established protocols and ongoing training, ensure that even seemingly harmless substances do not adversely affect the environment.

LFRS is ideally placed to minimise the impact harmful substances have on the environment as its officers are often the first on the scene at many incidents.


The Environment Agency provides LFRS with equipment to minimise the impact of pollution during incidents. Every fire appliance now carries a pollution 'Grab Pack' containing drain seals, booms that skim and collect oil from the surface of watercourses and oil absorbent materials.

LFRS has also been provided with specialist equipment, including pumps, tanks, larger booms and containers for leaking drums, which is held on a dedicated vehicle at Coalville Fire and Rescue Station.

This equipment has been used many times to prevent the pollution of watercourses, in particular the grab packs on the front line appliances.

In the last two years, the Coalville based appliance has been mobilised 15 times to serious threats of pollution as a result of emergencies. Earlier this year, Fire and Rescue Service staff worked with the Environment Agency to minimise the environmental impact of a mixture of substances, including fruit juices, split as a result of a goods vehicle overturning. The substances were prevented from entering the water courses using specialist pumps supplied to LFRS by The Environment Agency.

 
 

Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk)
Press consultantship
(Oliver Blackburn)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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