
Government accused of 'contempt' over lack of running water at fire stations
The Conservatives have accused the Scottish Government of treating firefighters with 'contempt' after figures revealed 18 fire stations around the country do not have running water.
According to the stats, which were obtained by the Scottish Conservatives via a Freedom of Information request, the 18 stations are mainly located across rural areas in the Highlands and Islands.
Most consist of fire appliance garages, but four have only a 'garden shed' and three are listed as 'no building'.
The party said that at one of the sites, a fire appliance garage at Foyers, it had been reported that fire crews were having to use wet wipes to clean equipment.
The Tories said the figures come in the wake of proposals unveiled by the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service (SFRS) to close up to 13 fire stations due to 'funding cuts', with the body having seen its budget fall by £57m in real terms over 10 years.
Scottish Conservative shadow community safety minister Sharon Dowey MSP said: 'These shocking figures are proof of the SNP's contempt for Scotland's brave firefighters.
'It's shameful and negligent that they are risking the health and wellbeing of dedicated emergency workers by denying them access to the most basic yet essential facilities at work.
'SNP ministers have been short-changing the service for years, leaving firefighters to do their job with one hand behind their back, jeopardising public safety.
'On their watch, the number of firefighters is plummeting, stations are being earmarked for closure and now we learn a growing number of bases lack running water.
'This situation is intolerable, unsustainable and could have devastating consequences.
'SNP ministers must ensure all of Scotland's fire stations are fit for purpose immediately.'
The Conservatives said in 2022 there were at least 11 fire stations reported as having no running water, which they said meant the problem had 'worsened, or no action has been taken'.
They also pointed to SFRS figures from April 2024 showing that 45% of fire stations are in poor condition and 75% are deemed 'unsuitable'.
The party added that the SFRS was also criticised by the Health and Safety Executive earlier this year over the condition of some fire stations.
Assistant chief officer Craig McGoldrick, director of training, safety and assurance at SFRS, said SFRS has an 'insurmountable' capital backlog of more than £800m, and that many of its ageing buildings 'require action'.
He went on: 'We can only address this by changing how we work. We're currently running a public consultation that outlines 23 options for change to help address urgent property issues and ensure our resources – staff, stations and appliances are matched to operational risk and demand across Scotland.
'We recognise that there are limited welfare facilities at some fire stations, and we have issues with RAAC in other sites, all of which form considerations as part of the public consultation.'
Mr McGoldrick said: 'The safety of our firefighters will always be a priority and it's important that our crews can shower and clean kit following attendance at an incident with potential contaminants.
'£3.2m is being invested by the service into the management of fire contaminants and this includes boosting our reserves of personal protective equipment, enhanced storage for contaminated kit and new laundry procedures.
'For the small number of stations without running water, specialist decontamination wipes have been provided.'
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'Scotland's firefighters do an amazing job and the Scottish Government continues to support the SFRS to deliver the high standard of services required to keep Scotland safe with an overall budget of £412.2m, an increase of £18.8m for 2025-26.
'Scotland continues to have more firefighters per capita than other parts of the UK.
'The SFRS has been clear that the changes proposed are not about cuts but so it can adapt to the changing risks and demands of communities and ensure firefighters are in the right place at the right time.
'For example, eight of the 13 stations in the review have not been operational for a number of years and dwelling fires have reduced by over 20% since 2013, whilst climate-related events such as flooding and wildfires have increased.'
Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News
Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
19 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Minister quizzed on PIP welfare U-turn - 'How on earth did it get to this point'
In a dramatic climbdown on Thursday, Keir Starmer agreed to protect all existing claimants from losing Personal Independence Payments. But he still faces a major rebellion A government minister has been quizzed on Keir Starmer's U-turn on cuts to disability benefits after a bruising week for the Prime Minister. Skills Minister Baroness Jacqui Smith was pressed after the government was forced last week to introduce major concessions to avoid a humiliating Commons defeat. In a dramatic climbdown on Thursday, the PM agreed to protect all existing claimants from losing Personal Independence Payments. The changes to PIP will now only apply to new claims from November 2026. But Mr Starmer is still facing a rebellion at tomorrow's crunch vote, with as many as 50-60 Labour MPs still said to be considering voting against the government. It would be the biggest revolt of Mr Starmer's premiership so far. Appearing on BBC Breakfast, Baroness Smith was told: "It's quite a bruising week for the government. Looking at it now, how on earth did it get to this point?" The ex-Home Secretary replied: "What I think is important is what we're going to be starting tomorrow is really important reform of a broken welfare system. "Welfare reform is always difficult and I think actually the engagement that;s happened with Labour MPs, who are rightly bringing the concerns of their constituents about how this reform is going to work, have made this legislation better." Baroness Smith also said she hoped that Labour MPs will "feel able to support" the government at tomorrow's crunch vote after the concessions announced last week. The minister also suggested it was not "constructive" to discuss potential punishments for MPs who may decide to rebel against Mr Starmer's welfare plans. Asked on Sky News what the consequences should be for Labour MPs who vote against the government on the matter, she said: "I don't think talking about punishments, even as a former chief whip, is the constructive way forward here." She later added: "It's always the case in legislation that you introduce the Bill, you have a second reading on the principles, and then you think about the details as you take that through all of its stages in Parliament. I'm sure that that will continue to happen." But speaking on Monday the Labour MP Clive Efford said he still will not support the welfare bill even after the Government made concessions. He told the Today Programme on BBC Radio 4: "I think there are a lot of people waiting to hear what the Government is saying today who may be inclined to accept what the Government has done. READ MORE: MPs on fence ahead of crunch welfare vote as 'costs facing disabled people soar' "For me the situation hasn't changed for those people who will be adversely affected and until we know and understand the impact on them, we shouldn't be taking what I think is a leap in the dark." He added: "There are choices that the Government can make here; there are other places it can go to identify the resources. What we want to see, and fully support, is measures the Government is putting in the palace to assist people to move into work, the right to try, we support, but we can't guarantee the savings. "When you're asking for £3.5 billion regardless of the impact of those changes that can only adversely affect people who are in the benefit system. We cannot make assumptions about how much we can save in the welfare system ahead of actually bringing in those changes and seeing how they work." Plans for a major review of PIP will also be set out today, which will be co-produced by disabled people, organisations who represent them and MPs. It is hoped that the terms of the review - which will place disabled people at the heart of it - will persuade nervous MPs that the legislation is now heading in the right direction.


The Guardian
21 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Senior home affairs official abused public office to get her future brother-in-law a job, Nacc finds
A senior home affairs department official has been found to have abused public office and misused internal information to get her future brother-in-law a job, including hiding their relationship and sharing job interview questions with her sister. A damning National Anti-Corruption Commission report released on Monday found the woman, who was given the pseudonym Joanne Simeson, forged a signature and coached her sister on how to hide the family relationship, eliciting suspicions from colleagues involved in the recruitment process. The report into the Nacc's Operation Kingscliff said Simeson, who at the time was the acting assistant secretary overseeing the department's global initiatives branch, had resigned from the public service before she could be terminated. While at home affairs, she praised her sister's partner to colleagues, created a job requisition, approved it herself and forged a witness signature on paperwork to fast-track the process. The woman's sister, known as Melissa in the report, was employed overseas. Her husband, known as Mark, studied while living overseas. Joanne sought Mark's resume for the job application in late 2022 and told her sister an assistant secretary was eager to conduct a job interview. 'We'll talk [Mark] through the lie,' she wrote in a text message. Her sister responded: '… he's so bad at lying he's too honest.' 'Well he's gonna have to do better or I'll get in trouble,' Joanne said. Melissa replied: 'Yes good say that and scare him haha.' Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email In March 2023, when Joanne put her Mark forward for another role in the department, a staff member asked if he would be suitable for the role, saying 'just want to check as his CV alone does not make him an obvious choice'. She called him a 'friend of a friend' and said he should 'play along' with the lie. 'Also I'm the boss so they will do whatever I say,' she told her sister. A colleague involved in the recruitment process said Joanne's interest in the role was unusual, describing Mark as 'this dude in Italy'. They asked another staff member if there was a connection or if Joanne thought they were underperforming. After he was employed, Joanne told her sister she met Mark at the office. 'HAHAHAHAHA I JUST WENT TO HUG HIM THANK GOD HE STUCK HIS HAND OUT,' she wrote. Melissa replied: 'GAHAHAHAH … What a good boy he's such a good boy.' Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Nacc said her conduct was serious because of her seniority and 'because nepotism, cronyism and undeclared conflicts of interest in APS recruitment are an area of widespread concern'. Submissions made on the woman's behalf said she had not received any workplace training on recruitment, had not had ongoing conflict of interest training and did not give proper and due consideration to her decision not to disclose the familial relationship. She was described as being very remorseful. The Nacc commissioner, Paul Brereton, said nepotism and cronyism were among the most frequently observed corrupt behaviours reported to the commission. The corruption finding is the first publicly completed investigation by Nacc, which was established in June 2023. Separately on Monday, a former home affairs immigration officer was sentenced for abuse of public office, after approving a visa application for her brother-in-law, and for causing unauthorised access to restricted data related to 17 people. The man had his application for a visitor visa refused in November 2019. About 16 minutes after he reapplied, the employee self-allocated the case to herself as the visa decision-maker. She was sentenced to eight months imprisonment, but will be released immediately to serve a 12-month good behaviour bond and pay a $10,000 fine.


Daily Record
34 minutes ago
- Daily Record
Perth's first female provost's daughter pays tribute to devoted mum who always put others' needs first
Jean McCormack DL served as provost from 1992 until 1996 The daughter of Perth's first ever female provost has paid tribute to her mum as a devoted family woman who always put others first. Jean McCormack DL died on Wednesday, June 18 aged 87. First elected onto Perth and Kinross Council in 1982, Jean went on to serve as deputy leader, leader of the administration, then provost from 1992 to 1996 and was a Deputy Lieutenant until aged 76. Born and raised in Dundee, Jean was the second of four girls. She is survived by her husband Peter (88), son Peter (62), daughter Carrie McLennan (60) and her five grandchildren: Katie, Reece and Lewis McLennan and Patrick and Olivia McCormack. Daughter Carrie said her mum was "always thinking of other people and how to make life easier for others". While Jean served as a Conservative councillor, her political life started with a stint doing voluntary work for a senior SNP politician. Her uncle Wallace Kinloch was the election agent for SNP MP for Perth and East Perthshire Douglas Crawford. He asked her to take on the job of constituency secretary in 1976. Carrie said: "She was unsure about it but he said, 'You can write letters, answer telephone calls, what else do you need'? And she thrived on that and really enjoyed it. It was a voluntary role. "Then she moved on to become an election agent, but after tackling a general election and a Euro election in the same year she took two years out, before winning a by-election in her own ward, the Carse of Gowrie as a Conservative." Helping others was what drove Jean. Carrie said: "For my mum, the politics were less important than serving the community and the people in that community." During her time as councillor she played a part in securing sheltered housing in Errol and was proud of Perth's reputation in town twinning and the start of Perth in Bloom's repeated success. Perth first won Scotland in Bloom in 1992 before going on to win its first Britain in Bloom award in 1993, claiming the large town trophy ahead of 1300 entrants. Carrie said: "She drove the application as provost and they went down to London for the award and had quite a hoolie in the hotel room I believe." Carrie added: "For five years she was chair of Friends of Aschaffenburg, Perth's longest established twin town and she was on the working committee for the Peace Child event and formed close ties with John Chan of the Jade Garden restaurant in Perth." In August 1997 Jean was awarded Officer of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland for promoting British-Polish relations and it was her work with the Polish community she was most proud of. Back in 1986, her son Peter announced he was going on a rail holiday to Poland and what was then Czechoslovakia. This being before the fall of the Iron Curtain and the Berlin Wall, it was a somewhat unusual holiday choice. It helped spark a long-lasting friendship between Jean and her husband Peter and a local Polish couple Nana and Janek Jarmulski, who frequented Perth's Conservative Club. When Britain geared up for celebrations of the 50th anniversary of Victory in Europe (VE) Day in May 1995, Janek and Nana expressed concern to Jean that the Poles might again be excluded from any commemorations. As Provost, Jean was the driving force behind arranging for Perth to host the largest VE commemorations in 1995 outside London and she made sure the Polish veterans were warmly invited. As a former primary school teacher, Jean valued education and was devoted to her family. Jean and her husband Peter - who lived on the same Dundee street - began dating in their teens. They celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary in December 2024. The pair loved cruising and, according to Carrie, "saw most of the world from a cruise deck". And, as Peter is the co-owner of Perthshire Caravans, it is perhaps no surprise they enjoyed caravan and motorhome holidays. The couple travelled all over Scotland and Europe and only stopped recently when the COVID pandemic hit. In fact, they loved it so much they even lived in a caravan, when they lived in England, until their house was built in 1970. Becoming Perth's first female provost was a huge deal. Carrie said: "It was massive at the time and she was nervous about it. One of the highlights for her was the relationship she had with the High Constables of Perth. "I was at home the first time she had to go to the annual dinner. She was the only woman in a room of 100-odd men. "I remember she said her first joke was, 'Now gentlemen, you need to look really closely at what I'm wearing, which caused confusion until she said - because it will be the first thing your wives will ask you when you get home'. "It's a joke of its time. Mum was a woman of her generation." Jean's funeral will take place at Perth Crematorium on Wednesday, July 9 at 1.30pm. All are welcome.