Debates between Ian Lavery and Oliver Heald during the 2015-2017 Parliament

Police and Fire Shared Services

Debate between Ian Lavery and Oliver Heald
Tuesday 3rd November 2015

(9 years ago)

Westminster Hall
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Ian Lavery Portrait Ian Lavery
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Of course we can. The only problem is that we have only one mine left—but anyway, I am sure we will discuss that. The coastguard is an important service as well.

The issue that has been brought to the House is the greater collaboration and work between the police and the fire service. I think we all agree that we want a top-class service, across all four blue-light services. We want to have the best possible and the safest service we can have—top class, with the best technology and everything that the communities that we represent need. The real cause for concern is that this is not just about having a top-class service or enhancing the blue-light services; it is being approached as a cost-cutting exercise. That is what the general public are concerned about.

Since 2010, there has been a huge reduction in the police service and the fire service and we cannot get enough people in the ambulance service. People are rightly concerned about the cuts in the services, whether front-line or back-office staff.

Oliver Heald Portrait Sir Oliver Heald
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Suppose that the fire service had someone who wanted to train as a paramedic and also someone who was capable of filling out the accident book, as the police do at a straightforward road accident. Why should that multi-tasking not take place? If it saves money, what is wrong with that?

--- Later in debate ---
Ian Lavery Portrait Ian Lavery
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I have lost my thread, Mr Pritchard. I was in full flow until I asked people to call me a dinosaur.

Oliver Heald Portrait Sir Oliver Heald
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One of the latest and most popular cartoons is called, I think, “The Happy Dinosaur”.

Ian Lavery Portrait Ian Lavery
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I have been called a dinosaur many times, but rarely have I been called a happy dinosaur, so that is a first.

In her very good speech, the hon. Lady suggested that we need to move immediately from a voluntary to a mandatory arrangement. We have a duty as Members of Parliament to listen to the people on the frontline—the police who are dealing with crime in our communities, and the fire and rescue services that are dealing with problems every day—rather than just tell them what to do.