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Among many other groups and unions, a fire truck representing members of the Fire Brigadeâs Union rolls by in support of the anti-austerity protests in London.
1926, A member of the Achille Serre Ladies Fire Brigade in London
viaÂ
The London Fire Brigade said today that the number of incidents involving people being stuck or trapped in objects like handcuffs and toilet seats has risen over the last three years. The new figures have prompted calls from fire chiefs for people to think carefully before dialling 999.
The Brigade has attended over 1,300 incidents involving people being trapped or stuck, often in everyday household items, since 2010. The Brigade said that each incident costs taxpayers at least ÂŁ290, meaning the incidents have cost at least ÂŁ377,000.
In 2010/11 crews attended 416 incidents; in 2011/12 this rose to 441 incidents; and in 2012/13 this shot up to 453. A total of 307 people were injured as a result of these incidents.
In the last three years the capitalâs fire crews have been called out to:
âąÂ 18 incidents involving children with their heads stuck in potties or toilet seats âąÂ Five incidents involving peopleâs hands being stuck in shredders âąÂ 79 incidents involving people being trapped in handcuffs âąÂ Nine instances of men with rings stuck on their penises. âąÂ Four incidents where people had their hands stuck in blenders âąÂ 17 incidents involving children with their fingers stuck in toys, including one with lego stuck on his finger
The Brigade said that in the past its crews have been called to a man whose penis was stuck in a toaster, and another with his manhood trapped in a vacuum cleaner.
Despite the unusual nature of some of the incidents, the Brigade was keen to stress that people should always call 999 in the case of a genuine emergency.
Third Officer, Dave Brown, said:
âSome of the incidents our firefighters are called out could be prevented with a little common sense. I donât know whether itâs the Fifty Shades effect, but the number of incidents involving items like handcuffs seems to have gone up. Iâm sure most people will be Fifty Shades of red by the time our crews arrive to free them.
âIâd like to remind everyone that 999 is an emergency number and should only be used as such. When firefighters are out attending to some of these avoidable incidents, someone else could be in real need of emergency assistance.
âIf thereâs a genuine emergency, fire crews will of course attend and will be on the scene to help within minutes.â
The Brigade said its crews are called to more than one incident every day involving someone trapped or stuck. People getting into a jam with rings, bracelets and watches are a common occurrence, while firefighters are also regularly called to assist people and children with their fingers trapped in electrical items like washing machines, sewing machines and heaters.
The most common type of call out for this type of incident is to people with rings stuck on their fingers, which accounted for almost 500 call outs over the last three years. âOur advice is simple,â said a Brigade spokesperson, âIf the ring doesnât fit, donât force it on. As well as being painful, you could end up wasting emergency service time if you have to call us out.â
The Brigade issued three top tips to help people avoid getting into tricky situations:
âąÂ Common sense is needed â if it doesnât look safe, it probably isnât, so donât do it! âąÂ If you use handcuffs, always keep the keys handy âąÂ Fingers and electrical appliances donât mix, especially those with blades
ENDS
Notes to editors
In the past, the Brigade has been called out to:
âąÂ A man with his penis stuck in a toaster âąÂ A man with his arm stuck in a portaloo âąÂ A child with its hand trapped in a sweet machine âąÂ A child with its head trapped in an ironing board âąÂ An adult stuck in a childâs toy car âąÂ A child with its head stuck in a massage chair âąÂ A child with its foot stuck in a brass vase âąÂ Someone with a test tube stuck on their finger âąÂ A child with a tambourine stuck on its head âąÂ A man with a sewing machine needle stuck in his finger
HEROES! London Fire Brigade Water Rescue team. Managed to take a few snaps at the end of a training session.
Kids playing in a fire engine
When I fantasised about firefighters waking me up in the morning, it definitely didnât include my upstairs neighbour setting his flat on fire and the 500 gallons of water they pumped into his flat come pouring on top of my bed at 6:45am.
Old style Volvo appliance of the London fire brigade. I love these pumps to bits. These have now been faded ou of active service in our brigade and replaced with Dennis sabres. We still have one at the training school, and will never forget the moment when someone accidentally stepped on the two tone air horn switch, and I felt like a proper firefighter for the first time.
This weekâs #FiremanFriday is Rob Townsend of The London Fire Brigade, who is featured in this charity calendar, which is in aid of Breast Cancer! The link to the calendar is ⊠http://charitycalendersbyapril.yolasite.com/fire-fighter-2014-calendar.php
(Courtesy, Facebook: Firemen Friday)
A few days before Christmas, we walked past this fire station. It was still active then, and one of the engines had people in it and the door was drawn back. This was a real treat for my children, who were shouting ânee-naw!â at the top of their voices. I stopped the buggy so we could watch a bit longer (the people looked busy so I wondered if they were about to go out on a call). They didnât, but the guy in the driving seat noticed the children watching and waved. This was even more of a treat, and the kids were even more excited. ThenâŠ. The guy switched the lights and sirens on! Just for a few seconds, but, seriously, it was Christmas come early.
I hope that whichever station that chap has been reassigned to has children who walk past and appreciate the waves, smiles, lights & sirens as much as mine do. They still call out ânee-nawâ whenever we go past.
I hope that heâs been reassigned, rather than lost his job.
Iâm editing a piece on the London property market, and came across the tidbit that the fire department had transferred the ownership of its fire engines to a private company, which is now in trouble. I found this absurd, and went to check. Lo and behold, itâs true and scary:
The Fire Brigade Union has raised concerns about public safety if the company enters administration. âHow are they going to guarantee there are fire appliances if the company that owns them goes into administration?â asked Duncan Milligan, the FBU spokesman. âThe creditors are going to have first call on the assets. Thereâs a real risk here that the fire service are not going to have access to the engines.â
Really? Some shit shouldnât be privatized. Period.
London Fire Brigade help extinguish animal cruelty by cleaning up cruelty
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"A fireman from the London Fire Brigade, wearing a smoke helmet. Circa 1908"
Engine 13 PAR 6