No one is denying that fact. However, senior officers taking command will pull out firefighters doing that task and start again.
I would agree.
There is a culture at the moment in the service where it seems Incident Commanders are reluctant to commit crews into even mildly dangerous situations which they might otherwise have done years before.
I fully appreciate there is no gain risking life and limb for an unsavable life, and to carry out operations as safely as possible, but life isn't alays that black and white.
Take the scenario of someone drowning as Clevelandfire mentioned - does the OIC commit a firefighter to rescue the drowning person - knowing that if it all goes wrong s/he will be on hot water and could be sacked or worse.
Or does s/he wait for a water rescue unit which may be some half an hour away knowing that the victim may not survive that long.
The public would expect you to go straight in and attempt to rescue, whereas the brigade would say this is a last resort and you should await back up. Infact I know some brigades where firefighters would point blank not be allowed into the water, and that crews MUST await water rescue teams - breaching policy would be a disciplinary offence. And I think that leaves a bad taste in the mouths of most firefighters.
I recall attending an incident where a poor old sheep got stuck in a canal. Fifty minutes, 4 pumps, a water rescue unit (and its support vehicle) later I was beginning to think the Brigade had gonme mad. So did the sheep who was by now quite cold and most bewildered. Using a bit of good old firefightership (done safely) we could have resolved the poor sheep's plight quickly without tying up so many resources. I did wonder if the sheep was rescued only to die of hypothermia later on that day!
It was embarrassing - members of the public walked past asking why there were so many fire engines for such a little sheep - and one member of the public commented " I wonder how much this little lot is costing me"
The funniest was a little girl who was walking along the towpath with her dad " Daddy " she asked, "why is there a cloud in the canal?"