ALMOST 3,000 firefighters and support staff are in coronavirus isolation and unable to work - up to 12 per cent of the national total.
The national figures have prompted the Fire Brigades Union to demand more testing for the emergency services, accusing the Government of "playing with fire".
Of the total, just under 2,600 of them are operational firefighters and control staff.
Emergency fire control rooms, which have fewer staff, have been worst hit, with some control rooms losing 15.9% of their staff.
The FBU said that, without urgent testing of frontline personnel, there would inevitably be an impact on brigades’ ability to provide fire cover and respond to other emergencies, including their work supporting the coronavirus response.
Fire and rescue services in the UK are operating with 11,500 fewer firefighters than in 2010.
Emergency fire control staff handle 999 calls and provide vital fire survival guidance for areas of up to 5 million people from a single room. Should one member of staff contract the virus, the emergency call infrastructure for an entire region could be at risk.
Some firefighters are now driving ambulances and assisting ambulance staff, delivering food and medicine to vulnerable people, and working with the police to move dead bodies.
Firefighters are also now fitting masks and respirators for NHS staff and delivering Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and medical supplies to NHS trusts.
While the FBU has called for firefighters to cease all non-essential, non-emergency interactions with the public, they will continue to come into contact in emergency situations and as part of their coronavirus response work, placing them at greater risk of infection, says the union.
Matt Wrack, FBU general secretary, said: “The Government is playing with fire by not testing firefighters and control room staff for coronavirus. Currently, crews are maintaining services, but this will become increasingly difficult as the virus spreads.
“There are already thousands of firefighters and control staff in self-isolation, only a fraction of which will have the disease. If we aren’t able to find out exactly who is infected, and more staff isolate unnecessarily, services will be put on a dangerous knife-edge.
“Of course testing of NHS staff has to be a priority, but firefighters and other emergency service personnel are also at serious risk. The very safety of the public relies on them being able to attend work. There needs to be a clear and deliverable testing strategy for all workers required to continue at work.
“The Government failed to secure test kits in sufficient numbers early in the pandemic and now frontline services are paying the price. Devolved governments have begun to take steps in the right direction, but in Westminster time is standing still – ministers need to get to grips with this crisis and ensure that all emergency service personnel are tested as soon as possible.”
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