1. The service is smaller, fire incidents have fallen and there is evidence of productivity improvement

The UK Fire and Rescue Services (FRSs) have fewer resources to work with than in 2009 but are also responding to fewer fire incidents. Non-fire incidents are taking up an increasing proportion of the FRSs workload in England, while activities aimed at preventing fires also remain an important element of the services workload1,2.

The FRSs key activities have not declined as much as the staffing and other resources used to deliver these activities. In other words, there is evidence that FRSs have been delivering similar activities with fewer resources, resulting in productivity growth between 2009 and 2016.

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2. The workforce for Fire and Rescue Services in England is smaller and more diverse

The total workforce in England has decreased by 22%, from a high of 51,700 in 2009 to 40,500 in 20183.

In England, the most common reason that staff left the FRSs in 2017 to 2018 was because of retirement, which accounted for 31% of those leaving. The second most common reason for leaving was to take up employment elsewhere (23%)4. On-call firefighters (43%) and support staff (40%) make up the majority of those leaving to take up employment elsewhere.

Salaries of FRSs workers across the UK were frozen in 2009 and 2010. From 2011, staff received a 1% pay rise, which has continued each year. In 2018, they were awarded a 2% pay increase, so that in 2018, a full-time “competent” firefighter received £30,533 basic annual pay, while an on-call “competent” firefighter received a full annual retainer of £3,0535.

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3. There are more female and Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic firefighters in the workforce than ever before

Of the 33,000 firefighters in England at 31 March 2018, 5.7% were women, compared with 3.6% in 20096. This increase is mainly due to a decrease in the number of male firefighters. The number of women firefighters slightly increased by around 350, whereas the number of male firefighters decreased by just over 9,9007.

4.1% of firefighters in England at 31 March 2018 are from Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) backgrounds, compared with 3.5% in 20118.

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4. Fire and Rescue Services in the UK are using fewer resources compared with 2009

Despite a 2.6% annual increase in the service’s overall resource in 2012 (increased real expenditure on labour, goods, services and capital such as staff, uniforms, fire engines and buildings), total inputs available to the service were 18% lower in 2016 compared with 20099.

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5. Fire and Rescue Services in England are attending fewer fire incidents compared with 2009 to 2010

Firefighters in England attended 241,500 fire incidents (excluding false alarms) in 2009 to 2010 compared with 167,300 incidents in 2017 to 2018, a 31% decrease10. Flame-retardant foam-filled furniture, government legislation on smoking, increased ownership of working smoke alarms (by 2016 to 2017 90% of households had one) and other behavioural changes may have contributed to this overall decline in incidents11.

FRSs are also tasked with promoting safety, helping prevent fires and managing risk so it is also possible that historic work in this area may have contributed to the fall in incidents. However, assessing the impact of preventative activities on the overall trends in incidents is challenging and any impact the FRSs may have had in this area cannot be established from these trends alone.

Fire false alarms are more numerous than the total number of fire incidents each year, although they were less prevalent in 2017 to 2018 than in 2009 to 2010. The majority (67%) of false alarms in 2017 to 2018 were “due to apparatus”. “Good intent” (30%) and malicious calls (3%) accounted for the rest.

The most common reasons for apparatus false alarms were accidental triggering by a human or animal (for example cooking food such as toast, carelessness, smoking), system issues (for example faulty, damaged or unsuitable equipment) and contaminants such as dust or steam12. “Good intent” false alarms are calls made in good faith, such as when people smell or see smoke, whilst malicious calls usually involve a hoax call or deliberate activation of an alarm.

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6. Non-fire incident attendances account for an increasing proportion of the service’s workload in England

Firefighters in England attended more non-fire incidents in 2017 to 2018 than in 2009 to 201013. These incidents are also making up an increasing percentage of the FRSs total workload. Non-fire incidents in England accounted for 50% of all incidents in 2017 to 2018 compared with 37% in 2009 to 201014.

Non-fire incidents rose sharply between 2014 to 2015 and 2016 to 2017, with nearly two-thirds due to increases in medical incidents. This coincided with the introduction of discretionary trials of emergency medical responding in 2015, where some FRSs formed an agreement with ambulance trusts to undertake health and care related work (for example co-responding to time critical incidents such as cardiac arrests). However, with the Fire Brigades Union removing support for these trials in September 2017 some of this work has now stopped.

There were also recent increases in non-fire incidents “effecting entry or exit” and in less numerous non-fire incidents categorised under “other” (which includes assisting other agencies).

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7. Fire and Rescue Services also undertake many activities that aim to prevent fires

FRSs also undertake many activities that aim to prevent or reduce the risk of fires. These include Home Fire Safety Checks (HFSCs) for the more vulnerable members of the community to mitigate the risk of fire in the home, arson prevention, promotional work with young people and other vulnerable groups as well as other campaigns and initiatives15. However, it is much more difficult to assess how the service’s overall volume of preventative work has changed over time. The activities local services undertake are highly variable, priorities will vary depending on local need and the recording of all activities in this area would be very resource intensive.

When calculating the output and productivity of FRSs, we collate data for the more common preventative activities. These include the number of hours spent on fire safety audits or inspections, petroleum and explosives inspections, enforcement activity, youth campaigns and initiatives16 and HFSCs.

Hours spent on fire inspection activities17 have declined between 2009 to 2010 and 2017 to 2018. Although common community safety activities18 increased between 2015 to 2016 and 2017 to 2018 they have not yet returned to 2009 to 2010 levels. These categories cover the most common preventative activities, however, care should be taken when looking at the series over time as some preventative work is not covered by these categories or may be replaced by unrecorded activity19.

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8. The total volume of work has declined by around 10% compared with 2009

We produce a high-level estimate of the total volume of output (that is the volume of work) produced by the FRSs. The measure uses detailed data on the different types of incidents the service responds to (fire and non-fire) and the key preventative activities it undertakes (inspections, investigations and so on).

These activities are weighted together using unit costs to approximate their relative value or importance to society (responding to a primary fire in a large building requires more resource than the rescue of an animal and is likely to be more important or valuable to society).

This approach suggests that overall output (the volume of work) in UK FRSs decreased 10% between 2009 and 2016. The inputs used by the UK FRSs to deliver services declined 18% over the same period.

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9. There is evidence of productivity growth within the UK FRSs

We produce productivity estimates for the UK FRSs by calculating the ratio of overall output to inputs in each year. Both inputs and output have declined since 2009. However, inputs have declined faster than outputs, meaning productivity is estimated to have grown by 9% between 2009 and 2016. The volume of main activities undertaken by UK FRSs has not declined as much as the staffing and other resources used to deliver these activities.

It must be noted that these statistics are not adjusted for the quality of the services provided and assume that the effectiveness of the service (for example effectiveness of putting out fires, effectiveness of preventing fires) has remained constant over time. If the safety or the quality of the services provided decreased over the same period, then some of these estimated productivity gains would be eroded. Alternatively, if the quality had improved the estimated productivity gains would have been larger. We are investigating the feasibility of incorporating a quality adjustment in the future. These statistics should therefore be assessed alongside other key performance indicators and studies (for example on the FRSs impact on safety statistics, on timeliness and effectiveness) for a complete picture of efficiency and value for money within the Fire and Rescue Service.

More information on public service productivity, including detailed methodology, can be found within our Public Service Productivity publication.

Notes:

  1. Note that this story uses ONS statistics on inputs, output and productivity within FRSs for the UK as a whole. However, statistics on workforce and activities are restricted to FRSs in England only. This is because there are some differences in reporting between devolved administrations (for example FTE versus headcount, financial year versus, calendar year, differences in categories, length of time series). However, while the presentation of some statistics has been restricted to England only for simplicity, the ONS statistics on inputs, output and productivity use data from across the UK where possible. Workforce and activities data for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland can be obtained from these sources:
    Scottish Fire and Rescue Service statistics
    StatsWales fires service operational statistics
    Welsh Government Fire and rescue service operational statistics: April 2017 to March 2018
    StatsWales fire incidents
    Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service

  2. Note that some data is presented in calendar year and some in financial year ending 31 March. This is because the ONS generally reports on inputs, output and productivity for calendar year, whereas more granular data is only published in financial year. In general, workforce data and ONS productivity data is presented in calendar year, whereas activity data is presented in financial year. We have restricted our analysis to 2009 onwards due to greater consistency and comparability of data, in particular conventions for incident reporting.

  3. Full-time equivalent employees (FTEs) – Full-time officers and staff are counted as 1.0, and part-time are counted according to the proportion of full-time worked (for example, a firefighter working 60% of full-time hours is counted as 0.6).

  4. Home Office, ‘Fire and rescue workforce and pensions statistics: England, April 201 to March 2018’ (October 2018) page 6. Fire and rescue workforce and pensions statistics: England April 2017 to March 2018.

  5. Fire Brigades Union pay settlement 2018 (accessed 20 March 2019).

  6. Note that diversity information does not have any impact on ONS statistics on inputs, output or productivity and is included as wider context only.

  7. Data source from Home Office, Fire statistics data tables, Workforce and workforce diversity, FIRE1103: Staff headcount by gender, fire and rescue authority and role, Table 1103.

  8. Note that this data was only collected consistently from 2011 onwards. Home Office, Fire statistics data tables, Workforce and workforce diversity, FIRE1104: Staff headcount by ethnicity, fire and rescue authority and role, Table 1104.

  9. The inputs index is calculated by looking at government expenditure on the service in each year, stripping out any changes that are due to inflation and weighting different expenditure components together. Note that although the number of FTEs in England fell in 2012 overall inputs slightly increased in the same period. As the number of FTEs in Scotland and the staff headcount in Wales also declined between 2011 to 2012 and 2012 to 2013 the small growth in total inputs reflects increases in goods and services, and procurement costs as well as increases in wider labour costs (for example including pensions). Differences in how FTEs and spend are allocated to a particular year and the need to deflate labour expenditure data may also be a factor.

  10. Home Office, Fire statistics data tables, FIRE0102: Incidents attended by fire and rescue services in England, by incident type and fire and rescue authority, Table 0102.

  11. Home Office, ‘Fire prevention and protection statistics: England April 2017 to March 2018’ (October 2018), page 7.

  12. Home Office, Fire statistics data tables, Incidents attended, FIRE0104: Fire false alarms by reason for false alarm, England, Table 0104.

  13. Non-fire incidents are also known as special service incidents. Examples include flooding incidents, responding to road traffic collisions, animal assistance and release type incidents such as lift releases and effecting entry or exit (a complete list can be found at Home Office, FIRE0902: Non-fire incidents attended by detailed type of action. A more detailed analysis of non-fire incidents for FRSs in England only is available).

  14. Figures exclude false alarms.

  15. Home Office, ‘Fire prevention and protection statistics: England April 2017 to March 2018’ (October 2018), page 8.

  16. Such as Firesetter and anti-social behaviour schemes.

  17. Fire prevention inspections include fire safety audits or inspections, other enforcement activity and petroleum, explosives and dangerous substances inspections. Home Office, FIRE1204: Fire safety returns, by fire and rescue authority, Table FS1 (total hours), Table FS2 (total hours), Table FS2 (total hours), Table FS9 (total hours) Home Office.

  18. Community safety activities include fire and rescue authority campaigns and initiatives (recorded under "firesetter and anti-social behaviour schemes and other youth diversion" or "other youth fire safety programmes" categories), home fire risk checks carried out by fire and rescue authorities and partners and older data on “Personnel hours spent on campaigns and initiatives”. Home Office, FIRE1203: Fire and rescue authority campaigns and initiatives, by fire and rescue authority. Home Office, FIRE1201: Home fire risk checks carried out by fire and rescue authorities and partners, by fire and rescue authority, DCLG / MHCLG, “Personnel hours spent on campaigns and initiatives”.

  19. Due to the variation in preventative activities and how they are recorded, the ONS uses the trends for inspection and community safety preventative activity and undertakes statistical adjustments to estimate output in this area.

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