If you had to choose, would you keep
your nearest fire station open but accept that there may be times when it is
not available; or would you opt for a fire station further away but which is
always available?
This is one of the tough questions
members of the public are likely to be posed as North Wales Fire & Rescue
Service works out the priorities for how it will be run over the next few years.
The service continually reviews and
improves the service it provides and as part of this process is launching a
public consultation on its long-term strategy this week - asking those who rely
on its services to voice their opinions on the key issues identified.
The two main priorities up for
discussion have been highlighted by the fire authority for the financial years 2012-13
and 2013-14:
+ To help to keep people and
communities safe by preventing deaths and injuries from accidental fires in
living accommodation. This will include adopting a new all-Wales Dwelling Fire
Response Charter that makes seven fundamental commitments to Welsh residents.
+ To find ways of reducing the
overall cost of running the Service each year in order to operate within the
annual budget.
In the second year of a three-year
budget freeze, the authority will be looking for innovative ways of reducing
costs without affecting services.
As for 2014-15, the authority is
asking people to join in taking a longer term view and send in their ideas
about what it should be considering when it drafts its future improvement
objectives and financial strategy.
Chief Fire Officer Simon Smith said:
"Today's fire and rescue service delivers a far more sophisticated range
of services than just responding to emergencies. At the same time, there is a
particular emphasis on public services working together effectively to build
strong communities - so more people than just those who have had fires will be
interested in what the fire and rescue service does.
"The recent months have not been
easy for many in the face of current economic pressures. Our main priority is
to achieve the required savings without compromising the levels of service we
have provided in the past. Is it not an easy task and we continue to
investigate ways of achieving our targets.
"The questions we are asking as
part of this consultation are therefore to do with the strategic direction of
the service as a whole and how to ensure we provide the best service possible
with the money we have available to us.
"The more people get involved,
the better our prospects of achieving the right balance of services we provide.
The more opinions we receive, the more we can be confident that the detailed
action plans we develop, will deliver exactly what the people of North Wales want."
The public can find out more about
getting involved by logging on to the website www.nwales-fireservice.org.uk
-completed questionnaires must be forwarded by the deadline on January 7, 2013.
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