Hampshire Fire and Rescue Service
Hampshire Fire and Rescue Service is the statutory fire and rescue service for the county of Hampshire, on the south coast of England. The service's chief fire officer is Neil Odin.
History
Until the Second World War, local towns had their own fire services. In 1941, these were combined into the National Fire Service. The Fire Services Act 1947 disbanded the National Fire Service and created county-level fire services. Hampshire Fire Brigade was formed on 4 April 1948. Many meetings and discussions were held prior to the service's creation in 1948 by the Hampshire fire service committees, to discuss who would be appointed the role of chief fire officer and how the service would be structured.With ongoing expansion, the service was under increasing pressure to open a service HQ. The FRS was originally hoping to use and acquire North Hill House in Winchester for usage as the headquarters – a building still desired by the Admiralty at the time and therefore the service was not allowed to buy it. In May 1948; the admiralty gave up the premises and allowed the service to operate it. However twenty years later in 1968, the service HQ moved to a floor of Ashburton Court, The Castle, Winchester as well as the control room.
In 1974, the service absorbed the Southampton and Portsmouth fire services and changed its name to Hampshire Fire Service.
In 1997, responsibility for the service was transferred from Hampshire County Council to the newly formed Hampshire Fire and Rescue Authority. Following the Fire and Rescue Services Act 2004, the service changed its name to Hampshire Fire and Rescue Service.
HFRS are now headquartered in Eastleigh. Since late 2015, it has shared its headquarters with Hampshire Constabulary.
Fire Stations/Appliances
Station Callsign | Station Name | Duty System | Appliances |
JH01 | Basingstoke | Wholetime/Retained | 2x EC, 1 IC, 1x RSV, 1x ALP, 1x SFV, 1x CSU |
JH02 | Rushmoor | Wholetime/Retained | 1x EC, 1x IC, 1x WrT, 1x L4T, 1x WFV, 1x CSU, 1x FESS |
JH03 | Bordon | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x WrC, 1x H4T, 1x CRV |
JH04 | Fleet | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x WrC |
JH05 | Alton | Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrT, 1x L4T, 1x EPU |
JH06 | Whitchurch | Retained | 1x IC |
JH07 | Grayshott | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x CRV |
JH08 | Hartley Wintney | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x L4T, 1x CRV |
JH09 | Kingsclere | Retained | 1x WrL |
JH10 | Odiham | Retained | 1x WrL |
JH11 | Overton | Retained | 1x WrT |
JH12 | Tadley | Retained | 1x WrL |
JH13 | Liphook | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x L4T, 1x CRV |
JH14 | Yateley | Retained | 1x WrT |
JH16 | Havant | Wholetime/Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrL, 1x L4T |
JH17 | Fareham | Wholetime/Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrL, 1x WrC, 1x L4T, 1x WRU |
JH18 | Gosport | Wholetime/Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrT, 1x MISU |
JH19 | Waterlooville | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x WrT, |
JH21 | Hayling Island | Retained | 1x RP, 1x WrT |
JH22 | Wickham | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x CRV |
JH23 | Cosham | Wholetime | 1x EC, 1x WrL, 1x RSV |
JH24 | Southsea | Wholetime | 1x EC, 1x IC, 1x WrT, 1x ALP |
JH25 | Horndean | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x CRV |
JH26 | Emsworth | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x CRV |
JH28 | Portchester | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x CSU, 1x CRV |
JH29 | Petersfield | Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrL, 1x CRV |
JH30 | Winchester | Wholetime/Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrT, 1x DIM, 1x ARU |
JH31 | Andover | Wholetime/Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrL, 1x WrC, 1x L4P, 1x CRV |
JH32 | Eastleigh Specialist/Technical Rescue | Wholetime/Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrT, 1x WrC, 1x L4P, 1x CSU, 1x SRU, 1x SDU, 5x PM, 5x USAR Pods, 2x FRU |
JH33 | Romsey | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x WrT, 1x EPU, 1x CRV |
JH34 | Stockbridge | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x CRV |
JH35 | Sutton Scotney | Retained | 1x WrT |
JH36 | Alresford | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x L4T, 1x CRV |
JH38 | Botley | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x CRV |
JH40 | Bishops Waltham | Retained | 1x WrL |
JH41 | Droxford | Retained | 1x WrT |
JH42 | HQ | 1x ICU, 1x CSU, 1x FESS, 1x OSU | |
JH43 | Lymington | Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrL, 1x CRV |
JH44 | Hythe | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x L4T, 1x CRV |
JH45 | Ringwood | Retained | 1x EC, 1x WrC, 1x L4P, 1x CRV |
JH46 | Totton | Retained | 1x WrT |
JH47 | Fordingbridge | Retained | 1x EC, 1x L4P, 1x HVPU |
JH48 | Lyndhurst | Retained | 1x EC, 1x WFV, 1x ARU |
JH49 | Beaulieu | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x CSU |
JH50 | Brockenhurst | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x CRV |
JH51 | New Milton | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x WrT, 1x CRV |
JH52 | Burley | Retained | 1x WrL, 1x L4T |
JH53 | Redbridge | Wholetime | 1x EC, 1x RSV |
JH54 | St Mary's | Wholetime | 1x EC, 1x IC, 1x ALP, 1x SFV |
JH55 | Hamble | Retained | 1x WrT, 1x CRV |
JH56 | Hightown | Wholetime | 1x EC, 1x FRC, 1x PM+MDU |
JH58 | Hardley | Retained | 1x EC, 1x L4P, 1x PM+HVPU, 1x PM+HVHL |
Fire Appliance Glossary/Callsigns
- Water Tender Ladder : P1
- Water Tender : P4
- First Response Capability : P5
- Enhanced Capability : P7/P8
- Intermediate Capability : P6
- Small Fires Vehicle : L1
- Water Carrier : W1/W3
- Aerial Ladder Platform : A1
- Incident Command Unit : C1
- Command Support Unit : C2 /C3
- Environmental Protection Unit : E1
- Light 4x4 Pump : M1
- Light 4x4 Tender : M2
- Heavy 4x4 Tender : M3
- Wildfire Unit : M4
- Response Support Vehicle : R1
- Water Rescue Unit : R2
- Animal Rescue Unit : R3
- Maritime Incident Support Unit
- Fire & Emergency Support Service unit : S5
- Prime Mover + High Volume Pump : T1
- Prime Mover + High Volume Hose Layer : T2
- Prime Mover + Foam Response Unit : F1+F2
- Co-Responder Vehicle : V1
- Detection, Identification & Monitoring : H8
- Prime Mover + Mass Decontamination Unit : H9
- Search & Rescue Unit : R4
- Search & Rescue Dog Unit : R9
- Operational Support Unit : T1
- Prime Mover : T2/T3/T4/T5/T6
- Module 1 - Technical Search Equipment
- Module 2 - Heavy Transport, Confined Space & Hot Cutting
- Module 3 - Breaching & Breaking Equipment
- Module 4 - Multi Purpose Vehicle
- Module 5 - Shoring Operations
Co-Responder and Immediate Emergency Care
- Defibrillator
- Bag and mask resuscitator
- Oxygen
- Airways
- Suction units
- Standard first aid equipment
- Entonox
Operations
Firefighting cover
HFRS provides fire cover according to a system of four risk categories which have traditionally been used across the UK, where every building is rated for its risk on a scale from "A" down to "D". The risk category determines the minimum number of appliances to be sent in a pre-determined mobilisation.Category "A" includes areas with a high density of large buildings and/or population, such as offices or factories. Three fire engines are to arrive at "A" risks within eight minutes, the first two within five minutes.
Areas with a medium density of large buildings and/or population, such as multi-storey residential blocks, will generally be classified "B" risk. Two fire engines will be deployed, with one to arrive within five minutes and the second within eight minutes.
Category "C" covers lower density, suburban areas and detached properties. One fire engine should arrive at a "C" risk incident within ten minutes. More rural areas not covered by the first three categories will be considered "D" risk. One fire engine should arrive at "D" risks within 20 minutes
HFRS also has fire cover for the ports of Southampton and Portsmouth, including HMNB Portsmouth. and the airports of Southampton and Farnbrough.
Mutual assistance
The Fire and Rescue Services Act 2004 gives the UK fire services the ability to call upon other services or fire authorities in what is known as mutual assistance.Hampshire Fire and Rescue gives mutual aid to the following services:
- Dorset & Wiltshire Fire and Rescue Service
- Surrey Fire and Rescue Service
- Royal Berkshire Fire and Rescue Service
- West Sussex Fire and Rescue Service
- Isle of Wight Fire and Rescue Service
Control
HFRS have their own control, stationed in the HQ, they mobilise appliances for Hampshire and Isle of wight.The service uses Networked Fire Services Partnership, so if need be, in spate conditions, mobilise on behalf of Dorset & Wiltshire and Devon & Somerset FRS, and vice versa.
Future
In 2015, Hampshire Fire and Rescue Service carried out a risk review to determine how to reduce costs to match a £16m funding gap that would develop by 2020 due to funding cuts. Following a public consultation in late 2015, the final proposals confirmed that none of the 51 fire stations in Hampshire would close and there would be no compulsory redundancies. Costs would be saved by reducing the number of operational firefighters at stations, including allowing some engines to respond to minor incidents with a smaller crew.The second major change was to introduce smaller engines at some stations. Until 2015, all Hampshire engines were a similar size and design. The changes designated three types of fire engine: Enhanced Capability engines, which are similar in size to a traditional fire engine; Intermediate Capability appliances, which are slightly smaller; and First Response Capability appliances, which are much smaller.
in 2019, the service scrapped the idea for first response capability appliance due to weight distribution and performance issues, instead would be getting 49 intermediate capability appliances and 24 enhanced capability appliances.