Aaah, Midland Retty, please don't confuse the ramblings of a geriatric with direct relevance to the PCSO's at the start of this post. The point I am trying to make is that there is a movement AWAY from proper, effective and balanced DRA (which we did in the dim and distant past but didn't have a name for it) to one where the risk assessment is based more on an arse-covering exercise. (Sorry to be blunt.)
I agree wholeheartedly that risks must sometimes be taken to save a life and I have taken them as well as given the orders but, as has already been stated, we are standing back in 'defensive mode' at jobs, whereas years ago they would be considered 'bread & butter' jobs and the fire tackled and extinguished inside the building with a minimum of fuss and a quiet pride in a job well done. It may be coincidence but it seems that since the fire service has come more under the scrutiny of the press and television, and more and more the public are seeing 'the job' from the inside, the ability to make sound operational decisions has been undermined and made the basis of a formula, i.e. risk x cost/benefit, or something similar.
The modernisation of the service has also had a negative impact on the ability to make decisions, as having all the right PQA's doesn't necessarily equip you to be an effective incident commander. It just means that when a decision is eventually reached, you will have considered the ethnic diversity of your crew, their sexual orientation, physical abilities, time of the month and whether or not it is a full moon, etc. Plus, as a first-rate communicator, you will have been able to explain fully to all concerned how you arrived at your decision and, as you are adept at working with others you will have the crew behind you 100%. As a good listener and counsellor, you will also need to gird your loins as you are about to have to deal with an irate property owner who initially called you to deal with a chimney fire but now looks on with utter disbelief at the burnt-out ruins of his former home.
I know, I digress and I exagerate. But that is how it feels from this end of a career (for wont of a better word).