The Jersey Fire and Rescue Service is the statutory fire and rescue service which deals with a broad range of incidents on the island of Jersey, including fires, road accidents, emergencies at sea, rescues from height, cliff based operations and incidents involving hazardous substances.[1]
Operational area | |
---|---|
Country | Jersey |
Agency overview | |
Chief Fire Officer | Paul Brown |
Facilities and equipment | |
Stations | 2 |
Website | |
www |
Performance
editA review of the service in 2022 highlighted "structural and resourcing challenges" which prevented it from fulfilling basic functions adequately and inhibited necessary change.[2]
Fire stations
editThe service has two fire stations: Rouge Bouillon, which is crewed by wholetime firefighters and retained firefighters; and St Brelade, which is crewed by retained firefighters.
Inshore rescue
editThe service is trained and equipped to respond to incidents at sea, and close to shore. This can involve recovering people who have become stranded on rocks which are exposed when the tide is low, and submerged at high-tide.
The service has developed its own Inshore Rescue Boat. The hull is a Humber Base, unlike the previous D-class lifeboat (EA16) lifeboat. Fabrication and development included DPM Nautique and FRS Personnel
Cliff rescue
editJersey has many cliffs on its coastline, and the service is able to rescue people from these cliffs using specialised equipment.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Who we are and what we do
- ^ "Independent review into Jersey emergency services reveals lack of staff and inadequate funding". ITV. 3 November 2022. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
- ^ Woman rescued after cliff fall[usurped]
External links
edit