HoratioHB
Well-Known Member
Having read Bilbo's thread with some concern the other day I decided to test the water and sent the nice Mr Cardy an E-mail and suggested maybe he ought to read what the forum was saying. I sent it at 1030 AM, his e-mail came back to me at 2330 on a Saturday! Which to me indicates some degree of professional dedication.
I replicate his reply in full. I can't say I agree with all he says - but at least he appears to be listening which is a first step.
'Thank you for taking the time to write to me. Your experience speaks for itself and you will readily understand some of the reasoning behind these proposals. One of my top priorities has to be for the safety of our volunteer Coastguards, as I'm sure you'll agree. Taking in time-expired pyrotechnics of unknown provenance, in uncertain condition, has never been one of the obligations of the Coastguard. We did it to be helpful and because there was a disposal route onward. Now that the MoD's service is ceasing , we are struggling to find a way of disposing of them at an acceptable cost. Technology moves on and just as the Boxer rocket was superseded, so the white flare has been overtaken by lighting technology. For the same reason that I'm concerned about accepting time-expired flares, I'm concerned about the storage and safe use of pyrotechnics that are now used so rarely as to be obsolete. I'd be interested to hear about your experience, as a helicopter pilot, of the use of these flares to illuminate a casualty. You may be imagining that a risk assessment has to be done with a clipboard and checklist, and while that might be preferable, thinking the situation through before acting hastily is a good start. I'm sure that as a yachtsman and divemaster you wouldn't go to sea without checking tides and weather and doing some passage planning before deciding to cast off; that sounds like what I mean by 'risk assessment'. Our 4x4s are serious bits of kit, light or laden, and sadly there have been accidents that could have been avoided if even a rudimentary risk assessment had taken place. I hope this explains some of the thinking behind our proposals.
Greetings
Peter'
I replicate his reply in full. I can't say I agree with all he says - but at least he appears to be listening which is a first step.
'Thank you for taking the time to write to me. Your experience speaks for itself and you will readily understand some of the reasoning behind these proposals. One of my top priorities has to be for the safety of our volunteer Coastguards, as I'm sure you'll agree. Taking in time-expired pyrotechnics of unknown provenance, in uncertain condition, has never been one of the obligations of the Coastguard. We did it to be helpful and because there was a disposal route onward. Now that the MoD's service is ceasing , we are struggling to find a way of disposing of them at an acceptable cost. Technology moves on and just as the Boxer rocket was superseded, so the white flare has been overtaken by lighting technology. For the same reason that I'm concerned about accepting time-expired flares, I'm concerned about the storage and safe use of pyrotechnics that are now used so rarely as to be obsolete. I'd be interested to hear about your experience, as a helicopter pilot, of the use of these flares to illuminate a casualty. You may be imagining that a risk assessment has to be done with a clipboard and checklist, and while that might be preferable, thinking the situation through before acting hastily is a good start. I'm sure that as a yachtsman and divemaster you wouldn't go to sea without checking tides and weather and doing some passage planning before deciding to cast off; that sounds like what I mean by 'risk assessment'. Our 4x4s are serious bits of kit, light or laden, and sadly there have been accidents that could have been avoided if even a rudimentary risk assessment had taken place. I hope this explains some of the thinking behind our proposals.
Greetings
Peter'