Clevelandfire - Fireftrm - Why would we chuck a line at a sheep. In repsonse may I ask if you are perhaps someone needing literacy help? Ask JM for assistance on reading and understanding information. Alternatively get a life, a sense of humour, or both. You might then spot that I said you could throw a line, or use inflated hose, but I doubt the sheep will grab hold - in other words a joke. Humour. Or don't you have that down on Teesside?
I, too, consider 4 pumps for a sheep to be ridiculous and think that the DRA and practical firefighter's skills may have come up with a solution. Having said that I still wouldn't be happy about sending Ffs in to a canal to rescue a sheep, which was clealry not drowning if it took 50 mins for a team to arrive and get it out. Perhaps if all the people weren't on the bankside it would have swum out, no doubt fearful of all the humans. I have not noticed sheep being particularly friendly and approachable, watch yourself if walking on the moors - they usually run/move away.
Midland Retty - the water rescue levels I quoted are national, not local.
DRA should be used and it should be supported by the service, however if a Ff gets injured, or worse, it will be under the greatest scrutiny and so it should. That injury occured may indicate a failure to properly carry out a DRA, or apply the controls. The main issue here is proper training for all ICs, at all levels. Too often staff are put in charge with insufficient training, how many RDS crews are still allowed to turn out with untrained Ffs acting up, or have WMs/CMs that haven't had formal ICS training? Quite a few I suspect. These crews are often the first on scene at water related incidents and likely to be the furthest form any specialist crews.