Generic Risk Assessment 3.4 - Fighting Fires in Open Rural Areas' is part of a series of Generic Risk Assessments (GRAs) that is the product of a ten year consultation period. The GRAs have been designed to safeguard Fire and Rescue Service (FRS) personnel and members of the public. This assessment examines the hazards, risks and control measures relating to Fire and Rescue Service personnel, the personnel of other agencies and members of the public when fighting fires in open rural locations including grass, moorland, crop and forest fires.There are significant hazards and risks which face Fire and Rescue Service personnel at rural area fires. Chapters within this GRA include: environmental conditions; terrain; non-service equipment, personnel; insects and animals; movement of vehicles; military ranges and hunting/shooting areas; open water; pylons/overhead power lines; manual handling and heavy physical work; stacked materials. Depending on the nature and scale of the operational incident a variety of significant hazards may be present. Therefore contents of other specific Generic Risk Assessments may also need to be considered.
Generic Risk Assessment 3.5 - Fighting Fires in Farms' is part of a series of Generic Risk Assessments (GRAs) that is the product of a ten year consultation period. The GRAs have been designed to safeguard Fire and Rescue Service (FRS) personnel and members of the public. This assessment examines the hazards, risks and control measures relating to Fire and Rescue Service personnel, the personnel of other agencies and members of the public when fighting fires in farms. This assessment considers the full range from smallholdings to large farms that undertake a wide variety of activities. There are significant hazards which face Fire and Rescue Service personnel at farm fires. Chapters within this GRA include: access; the nature, construction and condition of farm buildings and farms; hazardous substances and materials stored or used on the farm; electrical power supplies; machinery, workshops, silos, barns and stores; water pits, slurry pits and lagoons; work at height; animals and insects; biological hazards including animal waste (solid, liquid) and bio-aerosols; stacked materials; non-Fire and Rescue Service personnel. Depending on the nature and scale of the operational incident a variety of significant hazards may be present. Therefore contents of other specific Generic Risk Assessments may also need to be considered.
This assessment examines the hazards, risks and control measures relating to Fire and Rescue Service personnel, the personnel of other agencies and members of the public when Service personnel are fighting fires in buildings. It assesses the issues which may be present from the building structure itself, to the contents and the tasks undertaken by firefighting crews. Depending on the nature and scale of the incident a variety of significant hazards may be present. Therefore contents of other specific generic risk assessments may need to be considered. There are four key areas that have potential to cause harm during firefighting in buildings: construction and design, the contents and use of the building, the nature of the fire and operational tasks and working and environmental conditions. The risks to personnel will vary dependant upon the tasks being undertaken and the resources provided.
Generic Risk Assessment 3.7 - Fighting Fires in Refuse is part of a new series of Generic Risk Assessments (GRAs) that is the product of a ten year consultation period. The GRAs have been designed to safeguard Fire and Rescue Service (FRS) personnel and members of the public. This assessment examines the hazards, risks and control measures relating to Fire and Rescue Service personnel, the personnel of other agencies and members of the public when fighting fires in refuse and refuse containers. This may vary from a fire in a small skip to one at a landfill or waste processing site. It also includes fires at unlicensed locations.
The Fire and Rescue Service Operational Guidance - Aircraft Incidents provides a consistent approach that forms the basis for common operational practices. It supports interoperability between fire and rescue services, other emergency responders, the aviation industry and other groups. This guidance covers a wide range of incident types that Fire and Rescue Services are likely to encounter in relation to aircraft. It is applicable to any event regardless of scale, from small incidents, such as an accident involving a microlight, to a large incident involving a civil aircraft (e.g. Airbus A380) resulting in a large scale major incident. It covers the time period from the receipt of the first emergency call to the closure of the incident by the Fire and Rescue Service Incident Commander. Whilst this guidance may be of use to a number of other agencies, it is mainly for the UK Fire and Rescue Service. In addition to detailed tactical and technical information it also outlines the key operational and strategic responsibilities and considerations that need to be taken into account to enable the Fire and Rescue Service to train, test intervention strategies and plan to ensure effective response at an aircraft incident
Generic Risk Assessment 3.3 - Fighting Fires in Domestic Chimneys is part of a new series of Generic Risk Assessments (GRAs) that is the product of a ten year consultation period. The GRAs have been designed to safeguard Fire and Rescue Service (FRS) personnel and members of the public. This assessment examines the hazards, risks and control measures relating to Fire and Rescue Service personnel, the personnel of other agencies and members of the public when fighting fires in domestic chimneys, including similar structures in other buildings such as public houses. It also covers false chimneys. Industrial chimneys pose specific risks and fall outside the scope of this generic risk assessment; therefore liaison with site owners may be necessary to identify individual characteristics. This publication also does not cover fires in ducting and extraction units. There are significant hazards and risks which face Fire and Rescue Service personnel at fires in domestic chimneys.
The Fire and Rescue Service Operational Guidance - Railway Incidents presents a framework for a safe system of work for operations at incidents involving railways. It provides robust yet flexible guidance that can be adapted to the nature, scale and requirements of the incident. Incidents involving railways may generate intense media attention where the operations of the emergency services are rigorously scrutinised. Whilst much of this attention is approving it will invariably focus on the preparedness of the emergency services and their operational effectiveness. Such incidents may place significant demands on local fire and rescue services and often require a national co-ordinated response from across the country
This publication presents a framework for a safe system of work for operations at incidents involving tunnels and underground structures. It provides a robust yet flexible insight that can be adapted to the nature, scale and requirements of the incident. Incidents involving tunnels and underground structures may place significant demands on local fire and rescue services and have often required a national co-ordinated response from across the country. This type of incident may generate intense media attention where the operations of the emergency services are rigorously scrutinised. Whilst much of this attention is approving it will invariably focus on the preparedness of the emergency services and their operational effectiveness.
This generic risk assessment examines the significant hazards and control measures relating to threatened or actual: offensive behaviour; abusive behaviour; violence; a combination of all three towards fire and rescue personnel. Scenarios may vary from offensive behaviour or verbal abuse to situations where public order has broken down whilst fire and rescue personnel are undertaking their duties. Planned and/or spontaneous public order events are not separate types of incident for the Fire and Rescue Authority, but it does potentially create a hostile working environment and additional hazards when fire and rescue personnel are working in these situations.
This document aims to offer Fire and Rescue Authorites guidance on how to identify confined spaces, and the appropriate action to take at incidents to protect personnel who are mobilised to such incidents. A related title deals specifically with rescues from silos (ISBN 9780117540910)
This generic risk assessment identifies the significant hazards and risks when attending fires in high rise buildings. These may be associated with the building structure, building contents and the tasks undertaken by firefighting personnel. It sets out the control measures relating to Fire and Rescue Authority personnel, personnel of other agencies and members of the public
Looseleaf version also available (ISBN 9780117540088). On cover: Fire and Rescue Service operational guidance. GRAs - generic risk assessments. This series only applies to England
This generic risk assessment applies to the work of Fire and Rescue Authorities at incidents involving acetylene. It is not intended to cover every conceivable hazard present but identifies the significant risks inherent with incidents involving acetylene cylinders or other forms of acetylene storage. This document suggests control measures that may be used to effectively deal with such occurrences. The assessment is particular to firefighting, rescue or other operations, at locations where acetylene may be stored and/or used in a variety of commercial and domestic settings
This generic risk assessment applies to all Fire and Rescue Authority operations which involve petrochemicals and their derivatives. The purpose of this assessment is not to address every conceivable hazard that may be presented, but to identify, evaluate and control the "significant risks" which are specifically inherent with these particular incidents. The assessment is particular to firefighting, rescue or other operations, at locations where petrochemicals are processed or stored and include: (i) Oil refineries and other processing installations; (ii) Storage tanks of various types; (iii) Tank farms; (iv) Road tankers and rail cars; (v) Pipelines
Generic Risk Assessment 3.7 - Fighting Fires in Refuse is part of a new series of Generic Risk Assessments (GRAs) that is the product of a ten year consultation period. The GRAs have been designed to safeguard Fire and Rescue Service (FRS) personnel and members of the public. This assessment examines the hazards, risks and control measures relating to Fire and Rescue Service personnel, the personnel of other agencies and members of the public when fighting fires in refuse and refuse containers. This may vary from a fire in a small skip to one at a landfill or waste processing site. It also includes fires at unlicensed locations.
This generic risk assessment examines the hazards, risks and control measures relating to fire and rescue personnel, the personnel of other agencies and members of the public when attending incidents in tunnels and underground structures. For the purposes of this generic risk assessment a tunnel or underground structure is defined as a natural or manmade structure, where all or part is below ground level or covered, to where people can resort to for work, pleasure or transit. This includes underpasses, or any associated shafts, but excludes basements. The locations can range from a strategic transport tunnel such as the Channel Tunnel to a utilities tunnel that may allow for occasional access for maintenance purposes. Included within the scope of this generic risk assessment are: (i) Tunnels for transportation (eg road, rail, pedestrian, waterways, cycle); (ii) Tunnels for utilities (eg cabling, water supply and drainage, gas, steam, oil); (iii) Manmade and natural underground structures (eg caves, mines, bunkers, storage facilities, military installations); (iv) Tunnels under construction (eg bored tunnels, cut and cover technique, sprayed concrete lining, or undergoing significant refurbishment).
Generic Risk Assessment 3.3 - Fighting Fires in Domestic Chimneys is part of a new series of Generic Risk Assessments (GRAs) that is the product of a ten year consultation period. The GRAs have been designed to safeguard Fire and Rescue Service (FRS) personnel and members of the public. This assessment examines the hazards, risks and control measures relating to Fire and Rescue Service personnel, the personnel of other agencies and members of the public when fighting fires in domestic chimneys, including similar structures in other buildings such as public houses. It also covers false chimneys. Industrial chimneys pose specific risks and fall outside the scope of this generic risk assessment. This publication also does not cover fires in ducting and extraction units.
This generic risk assessment examines the hazards, risks and control measures relating to fire and rescue personnel, the personnel of other agencies, and members of the public dealing with incidents involving electricity. The scope of this generic risk assessment relates to two basic types of incident: (i) Fires in equipment or premises or sites using, distributing or producing electricity; (ii) Rescue of casualties in contact or within close proximity to live electrical equipment
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