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David Wyatt - LFB Statement of Assurance - supporting data
Each year, London's fire and rescue authority is required to prepare an annual Statement of Assurance (SoA) in accordance with the Fire and Rescue National Framework for England. This is to " provide annual assurance on financial, governance and operational matters ". The format of the Statement follows guidance produced by the government (May 2013). Governance of London's fire and rescue service changed on 1 April 2018, when the former London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority (LFEPA) was abolished and the London Fire Commissioner (LFC) became the fire and rescue authority for London. The LFC runs the London Fire Brigade (LFB). The SoAs for 2017/18 onwards will be approved by the LFC - see the LFC decisions page here ; SoAs up to and including 2016/17 were approved by the former LFEPA . From the statement for 2014/15, the Brigade has published supporting data as an appendix to the Statement. This page includes the supporting data for SoAs from that date. Originally, this data was to help assess the impact of the changes to fire stations and fire engines made on 9 January 2014 and agreed as part of the Fifth London Safety Plan (LSP5). Also, the impact of removing a 13 further fire engines from service in June 2016 (as part of the budget savings for 2016/17). The SoA for the preceding financial year (April to March) is normally published in the Autumn. Data sets that support the latest SoA are palso published here. The LFB has published full datasets for incidents attended since January 2009, plus a dataset which details of every fire engine (pumping appliance) sent to an incident. These datasets, which are updated on a monthly basis, are: LFB incident attended since January 2009. Fire engine mobilisations since January 2009.
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David Wyatt - Assessment of Local Risks supporting the London Safety Plan 2017
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This page is about the Assessment of Local Risks (AoLR) which supported the Brigade's London Safety Plan 2017 (LSP2017). This 2017 plan has now been replaced by the Brigade's new Community Risk Management Plan (CRMP) - Your London Fire Brigade: our plan for 2023-29. This new plan, plus the Assessment of Risk which supports, it are available on the LFB website here. The 2017 Assessment of Local Risk was a public facing document, designed to help increase the understanding of how risk (from fire and other emergencies) in London has changed over time and how different elements combine together to give a picture of risk. The AoLR 2017 was not the only process the LFB uses to determine and provide its services, but it does give a high level overview which can be used to understand the basic concepts of fire cover and the steps the LFB are taking to make people safe. The Brigade sets out how its prevention, protection and response activities will best be used to mitigate the impact of risk on communities in its Integrated Risk Management Plan (IRMP). The Brigade’s IRMP was formerly known as the London Safety Plan (LSP). The LSP 2017 originally covered the four year period from April 2017 to March 2021 (but was extended to 31 March 2023) and is available here. Previous LSPs are available on the LFB web site here. The methodology used for the Assessment of Risk was reviewed and updated as part of the preparation for the new Community Risk Management Plan (CRMP) which runs from April 2023. Ward level data is also published on this page for the 2017 AoLR (in XLS and CSV formats). This data underpins a postcode look-up tool available on the LFB web site here.
David Wyatt - London Fire Brigade - fleet list
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The London Fire Brigade operates a large number of emergency (operational) and non-operational vehicles. There are regular Freedom of Information requests asking for the details of these vehicles and this list is published to largely meet that need. It will be updated annually; usually in the last quarter of the calendar year. From 2020, the list also includes details of appliances removed from service during the year and new appliances coming into service. The London Fire Commissioner is the fire and rescue authority for London, and runs the London Fire Brigade. The format of the fleet list changed in October 2019 (i.e. vehicle registration numbers and vehicle locations removed). This change reflects national security considerations; the format of the list reflects a similar list published by the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS). Data for earlier years has been removed..
Komenda Główna Państwowej Straży Pożarnej - Wykaz rzeczoznawców ds. zabezpieczeń przeciwpożarowych
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,Komendant Główny Państwowej Straży Pożarnej zgodnie z art. 10 ust.1 pkt 7 ustawy z dnia 24 sierpnia 1991 roku o PSP z 24.08.1991 r. (Dz. U. z 2017 r. poz. 1204, 1321, 1567) powołuje i odwoływanie rzeczoznawców do spraw zabezpieczeń przeciwpożarowych oraz sprawuje nadzór nad ich działalnością. Zgodnie z art. 11h ust. 3 ustawy z dnia 24 sierpnia 1991 r. o ochronie przeciwpożarowej (Dz. U. z 2017, poz 736 z późn. zm.) udostępnia w BIP Komendy Głównej PSP informacje dotyczące wykazu rzeczoznawców ds. zabezpieczeń przeciwpożarowych. Aktualizacja jest prowadzona na bieżąco zgodnie ze zmianami stanu faktycznego. http://kgpsp.bip.gov.pl/rzeczoznawcy-do-spraw-zabezpieczen-przeciwpozarowych/,
London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority - LFB senior staff salary information
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The London Fire Brigade (LFB) publishes details of certain senior staff as required by the Accounts and Audit Regulations 2015 (Statutory Instrument 2015/234) as part of its annual accounts: the number of employees whose remuneration in that year was at least £50,000 in brackets of £5,000 details of remuneration and job title of certain senior employees whose salary is at least £50,000, and employees whose salaries are £150,000 or more must also be identified by name. This information is included in the published accounts which are available here for 2018/19 on the LFB website. The 'senior staff' prescribed by the regulations for the Brigade comprise four officers namely: the Director of Corporate Services, the Director (Deputy Commissioner) of Safety and Assurance, and the Director (Deputy Commissioner) of Operations and General Counsel. Under the Local Government Transparency Code 2015, the Brigade must also publish a list of responsibilities (for example, the services and functions they are responsible for, budget held and number of staff) and details of bonuses and ‘benefits-in-kind’, for all senior employees whose salary exceeds £50,000. And, in the interests of transparency, the Brigade publishes details of all staff who are designated as heads of service (assistant directors and assistant commissioners) in addition to the four officers required by the Accounts and Audit Regulations, and this information is available on this page. Details of gifts, hospitality and expenses for senior LFB staff are published quarterly here. Note: For Commissioner/Director roles, the budget and staffing figures have been aggregated from the budgets/staff held by Heads of Service under each Director, so there is some double counting. LFB staff are employed by the London Fire Commissioner who is the fire and rescue authority for London; the London Fire Commissioner is not an employee of the LFB and is employed by the Greater London Authority. Details for LFC are included on this page for completeness.
London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority - LFB/LFEPA payments over £250 - 2016/17 and earlier years
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This is histoirc data for 2016/17 and earlier years. Later years are published separately. This dataset is not updated. Payments over £250 made by the London Fire Brigade (LFEPA) as part of the government and Mayor of London's transparency agenda. As of November 2012 the threshold for expenditure changed from £500 to £250 at request of the Mayor. The Local Government Transparency Code 2015 requires the data to indicate VAT for payments which cannot be recovered; there are no such payments for LFB/LFEPA as all VAT is recoverable. The Transparency Code also requires a 'merchant category' to be added to payment details. LFEPA has 'Proclass' data and this has been added to published data (from January 2015). Please note that approximately 75 per cent of LFEPA vendors currently have a Proclass classification and this may result in a small number of payments not having a ‘merchant category’. LFEPA runs the London Fire Brigade (LFB).
LFB Information Management - Community Safety Risks
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A live Power BI report that shows an overview of Community Safety metrics per London Borough (including fires as well as special service incidents). This report, which is updated daily, provides data to support the development of Community Safety Strategy Plans and helps to identify high risk key areas and monitor trends over time. If you have any questions about this tool please email data@london-fire.gov.uk
LFB Information Management - Incidents attended by LFB, by type and borough
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London Fire Brigade (LFB) data covering all incidents attended by month back to January 2013, broken down by incident type: All fires attended - broken down by primary* and secondary fires Deliberate fires attended Dwelling & non-dwelling fires attended False alarms attended Road Traffic Accidents attended Vehicle fires attended - broken down by deliberate/accidental/unknown Open space fires attended - broken down by deliberate/accidental/unknown Rubbish fires attended - broken down by deliberate/accidental/unknown Shut-in-lifts attended Special services - non-emergency visits *Primary fires comprise of all fires attended by LFB in buildings, vehicles and outdoor structures, and fires involving casualties, and fires attended by five or more appliances. The statistics include some incidents that are not geo-referenced (with a borough name). Sometimes incidents are geo-coded later, and so the data can change each month, and data for more recent periods must be regarded as provisional. Data are available in raw machine-readable (csv) format.