Recommendations and reform: an interview with Sir Tom Winsor

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Fire & Emergency Response

At the end of March 2022, Sir Thomas Winsor will step down as Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services. Political Editor Catherine Levin spoke to him about his final State of Fire report and what he plans to do next

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ir Thomas describes the first part of State of Fire as an essay where he can set out his broad view on the Fire and Rescue Service. He says it is not about what has happened in the preceding 12 months, rather it is a longer-term overview of progress – or the lack of it. It is a chance to get beyond the counting and the measuring and really think about what improvement means. He is keen to point out that he is not a regulator – he was, a long time ago, for the railways but for the last ten or so years, he has shone a light first on police and more recently on the Fire and Rescue Service. He is a lawyer by profession (not a trade, as he was quick to correct during the interview) and has a lawyer’s careful, meticulous approach that brings to mind the forensic unpicking of the evidence by the legal counsel at the Grenfell Inquiry. It is good to know that the inspection of fire and rescue services is carried out in this way; it provides a reassurance even if the outcomes are hard to read for those on the front line. There are limitations to what an inspector can do. Sir Thomas makes recommendations and as he presents State of Fire to Home Secretary Priti Patel, she can see them and note that yet again they have not been implemented and yet again the dates have been moved back. Whether

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An interview with Sir Tom Winsor

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Recommendations and reform:

that bothers the Home Secretary is hard to know, but Sir Thomas has his own views. “An inspectorate can only say what ought to happen. It is for others to decide what to do with what we have said ought to be done.” He expands on this point. “If they want to slow pedal, if they want to disregard a recommendation because they think it is not affordable or the right thing to do, that is the way the legislative scheme works at the moment.” He does not complain about this and is rather matter-offact about it all; he is certainly not looking for Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services (HMICFRS) to have more powers. At the start and end of the interview the topic of the Fire Reform White Paper comes up. He is frustrated that it has not been published already and in State of Fire he reinforces the point about progress: ‘While improvements have been made at local and national levels, including in recent reforms, much more needs to be done. Policymakers and legislators need to raise the priority of fire reform considerably. The service, its staff and the public deserve no less’. One of the reasons why the white paper has not yet been published may be down to something as simple as capacity. It takes a lot of time to think through policy change and express it in a way that allows for broad, meaningful consultation. With finite civil service and ministerial time and the huge pressure on the Home Office and the Department for Levelling up to sort out the building safety crisis, it is likely that there simply is not enough collective headspace to think through a Fire Reform White Paper. Asked about this, Sir Thomas agrees, and provides some insight into the process: “I think that’s partly the case, the political leadership only has so much capacity to deal with lots of things at the same time. I am optimistic that the Fire Reform White Paper will be very reforming, more than the pessimists may fear. It is imminent and the appetite of the Fire Minister is undiminished. It needs top-cover political support; Number 10, more so now than even under Gordon Brown, is much more interventionist in policy matters. So, getting things approved just takes longer.” There is already substantial reform taking place through the National Fire Chiefs Council (NFCC) and the Fire Standards Board, with both organisations getting plenty of

“I am optimistic that the Fire Reform White Paper will be very reforming, more than the pessimists may fear. It is imminent and the appetite of the Fire Minister is undiminished” www.fire–magazine.com

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February 2022

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