Cornwall Fire and Rescue Service says it will not tolerate any form of bullying, harassment or discrimination after a report raised concerns in ten different regions.

Cornwall was one of ten fire services that were subjected to detailed inspections by His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue Services following concerns raised on the handling of misconduct procedures.

The other services were Dorset and Wiltshire, Greater Manchester, Humberside, Kent, Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire, Staffordshire, Tyne and Wear, and West Midlands.

The inspections found the culture in fire and rescue services is showing some early signs of improvement, but too much unacceptable behaviour remains.

In a new report, the inspectorate said that most fire and rescue services have taken steps to improve standards of behaviour and root out misconduct.

 

But the inspectorate found there are still pockets of abhorrent behaviour, and it has called for further improvements to make sure misconduct is handled effectively.

Inspectors also found that: occurrences of unacceptable behaviours including sexist, racist and homophobic language were most common within watches (a group of firefighters assigned to work on the same shift).

In a statement issued to the Packet, Cornwall Fire and Rescue Service said behaviour like this would not be tolerated.

"Cornwall Fire and Rescue Service will not tolerate any form of bullying, harassment or discrimination and we have a strong track record in holding individuals to account when they fall short of the standards we expect from our staff," it said.

"We work hard to embed a positive professional culture across our service and are committed to ensuring we are fair and inclusive.

"We welcomed the opportunity to be involved in the HMI Thematic inspection. The recommendations will be reviewed and, where not already, included in our ongoing work to improve equality, diversity and inclusion across the service."

Staff described examples of toxic cultures where managers failed to challenge behaviour so they could remain popular; there is a widespread lack of confidence in misconduct processes which prevents staff, particularly women, from speaking out; supervisors and managers aren’t sufficiently trained to manage staff performance, poor behaviour and welfare issues.

Staff that manage and investigate misconduct need the right training; and services need to learn from their misconduct cases. They must do more to understand why unacceptable behaviour happens and what needs to change to prevent it happening in future.

HMICFRS has made 15 recommendations to chief fire officers, fire and rescue authorities and others. These include the need for each service to have access to a professional standards function to support fair and transparent misconduct investigations, and to introduce the right training and support for all staff investigating misconduct.

His Majesty’s Inspector of Fire and Rescue Services Roy Wilsher said: “Since we began inspecting the fire and rescue sector in 2018, we have highlighted the urgent need for services to tackle misconduct and to improve their culture. I am pleased to see the beginnings of improvements.

“It’s clear that senior leaders are focused on improving values and culture. But there is still much more work to be done. We found some deeply troubling pockets of abhorrent behaviour, such as bullying, harassment and discrimination. This was most often found on watches. This is unacceptable and must be challenged.

“We also found too many staff lack trust and confidence in the misconduct process, making them fearful about reporting issues. And not enough training is given to those doing the important job of managing and investigating misconduct cases. Stronger reforms are required to make sure misconduct processes are robust, operate effectively and, importantly, are trusted by staff. Senior leaders need to learn from what’s gone wrong, so it doesn’t happen in future.

“We will be monitoring the progress of all services against our recommendations. These practical steps will help to bring about the positive and lasting change that fire and rescue staff, and the public, deserve.”