There are no fire trucks at the Chaguaramas, Woodbrook, Belmont, Morvant and Santa Cruz fire stations.
At another three stations last week, there were trucks with serious defects, compromising the fire officers' ability to put out fires. But within the last few days, the Sunday Guardian learnt, the authorities started repairing these vehicles.
This and other issues facing the T&T Fire Service are putting the public at an elevated risk of property damage, serious personal injury or even death from major fires when there is a slow response time, several fire officers, whose identities have been withheld to protect them, said. They said the issues facing the Fire Service are serious and pose a safety risk.
They are advising the public to install smoke detectors, purchase fire extinguishers, do electrical checks at home and maintain the grass around their properties to minimise the chances of a major fire as the current state of the service makes it impossible to guarantee a timely and effective response.
The slow response times, they claim, are largely a result of a lack of available water/fire trucks, insufficient maintenance of critical equipment like ladders, inadequate safety gear, and an overall lack of resources available to fire officers across the country.
In response to the claims by fire officers, the Public Relations Officer for the Fire Service Daron Dasent admitted that the service is not where it would like to be, but claimed it is fulfilling its mandate.
“The service has operational plans in place that utilise appliances both from covering stations and from other divisions to assist in having an effective response in any area. An extraordinary bush fire season has placed additional strain on limited equipment,” he said in response to questions from the Sunday Guardian. He confirmed that there were several fire stations without fire/water trucks.
In fiscal 2022, according to budget 2023 documents, the Fire Service was allocated $61 million. $40.8 million, according to the document, was spent on the upgrade of existing fire stations, the construction of new stations, as well as for the procurement of vehicles and equipment.
“I am seeing plenty crap happening before things get sorted. We are not looking to point fingers. We are looking to solve the problem. I am studying to save people’s lives. To save people’s properties. I just want to get people out of dire situations. That’s all I care about.
“It hurts your heart, boy. It had a day right across the street, across the park (less than 200 metres away) the air condition unit on a house caught fire. Look where the fire station is and look where that building is, firetrucks from headquarters on Wrighton Road had to respond,” said a senior fire officer at a fire station in west Trinidad.
A Sunday Guardian investigation revealed that as a result of the absence of water/fire trucks at many fire stations, the functionality of fire hydrants is not being checked as mandated.
Many have gone years without being checked.
When a hydrant was opened by an officer at a station we visited, not a single drop of water emerged from it.
“It leaves you despondent. Everybody blames the fireman. I hear Bristo (Chief Fire Officer) and all blaming firemen recently. It have problems and nobody is deciding to fix the problems. Yes, we have limited resources, but we need what we need.
“Government is not providing enough resources to the Fire Service. We living in Trinidad and Tobago–seek for self and try for best. Let’s be real because the ministers and them don’t have a problem. My father always tells me this, a stone in my shoe doesn’t affect you until it reaches your shoes. But how many people will die before that happen?” another senior fire officer lamented.
The long-standing issues facing fire officers have become topical again following the tragic deaths of eight-year-old Zaya Morris and her 41-year-old mother, Kemba Morris, in a house fire in Quinam Road, Siparia, last Monday.
According to fire service sources, the firetruck intended for use at the Siparia Fire Station was being used at the Penal Fire Station.
So, instead of fire officers being able to respond to the Quinam Road fire from the Siparia Fire Station, officers from the Penal station, a further distance away, had to go to the scene, causing a delay.
According to fire service sources, as a result of a lack of fire trucks in that area, the trucks are rotated based on the number of reports typically made in a certain area.
Following the fire, Chief Fire Officer Arnold Bristo admitted in a radio interview that the service has issues with damaged appliances, saying that fire officers were in part to blame.
On Wednesday, members of the T&T Fire Service Association, the Chief Fire Officer and the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of National Security met to discuss the issues facing the service.
However, after the meeting’s conclusion, Fire Association President Leo Ramkissoon said no immediate solutions were provided for their many concerns.
Offering condolences on Monday to the Morris family, Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley said, in a Facebook post, “We will continue to improve our ability and infrastructure to minimise the frequency of such occurrences. Sadly, burglar-proofing is essential in our world but it is advisable that we review the construction designs to ensure escape during emergencies.
“Given the dreadful repeat of this tragedy, now may be a good time to review all our situations to allow for improvements without compromising the security aspects of the locked bars.”
While acknowledging that burglar proofing should be examined, the fire officers the Sunday Guardian spoke with said there are far more pressing concerns within the service that the Prime Minister should be expressing concern about.
“We have been without a truck at this station since the major Greenvale flooding incident in 2018. When are we going to get a firetruck? When?” an angry fire officer asked.
“How many operational ladders does it have in the service? It has no ladders to reach up in a high-rise building. Then Bristo will say it is our fault because we not taking care of appliances? Don’t do us that. There is no maintenance programme in place to maintain equipment. I’m in the job plenty of years now and I’ve never known one.”
An officer, at a different fire station, said, “Lack of resources is the main issue. We are without a fire truck for several months. We are also lacking safety equipment. It is frustrating but we are disciplined enough to get as much of the job done as possible.”
4 to 5 fire trucks covering more than 141 square miles
Over the past week, the Sunday Guardian visited several fire stations, mainly in western parts of Trinidad and Port-of-Spain, to get a sense of the issues causing slow response times at fire stations.
Of the eight fire stations between the Chaguaramas Fire Station, located at Airways Road, to the San Juan Fire Station, located along the Eastern Main Road, three fire stations had water/fire trucks and five had no water/fire trucks. This was confirmed by Fire Service PRO Dasent.
For the length and breadth of T&T from the Chaguaramas peninsula to San Juan, there are currently between four to five water/fire trucks available to respond to fires.
Fire Service sources insist it's four, but Fire PRO Dasent said it’s five.
Each outstation, according to Dasent, is supposed to have one firetruck, while the Wrightson Road Headquarters is supposed to have four, meaning the geographical area in question is supposed to have 11 fire trucks.
The four or five water/fire trucks, which come from three fire stations, cover essentially the entirety of the populations and landmasses of the Diego Martin Regional Corporation and the San Juan/Laventille Regional Corporation.
According to 2010 census data, those two corporations represent a population of more than 260,000 people and a landmass of more than 365 square kilometres or 141 square miles.
*The Fire Service Headquarters, on Wrightson Road, has a water tanker that holds 10,000 litres; a water tender–a small firefighting truck that holds 4,000 litres of water; an emergency tender that is not designed to transport water, only fire officers and equipment; and it also has a hazardous material vehicle.
The pump of the water tender–one of the station’s two trucks designed to pump water to out fires–is not working properly, meaning it can only hold around half its designed capacity.
*The Four Roads Fire Station has one water tender that can hold 4,000 litres of water. The tank, however, is incapable of holding water because of a leak and officers have to constantly top up water–every 30 minutes or so–to be ready in case of a fire.
Those stations, and their four water/fire trucks, not only respond to fires in their jurisdictions but must also cover the jurisdictions of the Chaguaramas, Woodbrook and Belmont Fire Stations as those stations are without water/fire trucks.
*The Woodbrook Fire Station has been without a truck since October 2018 when the only truck was taken to support flood relief efforts during the Greenvale flooding disaster. It never returned. The Fire Headquarters Station on Wrightson Road covers Woodbrook’s zone which covers an area as far as Arapita Avenue, Woodbrook, locations around the Queen’s Park Savannah, parts of Diego Martin and Paramin.
*The Chaguaramas Fire Station, which covers from Fitzallen Street, Point Cumana down to the Staubles Bay coast guard base, has been without a water/fire truck for several months. The Four Roads Fire Station covers its jurisdiction.
*The Belmont Fire Station, which is supposed to cover Belmont, parts of Port-of-Spain to as far as parts of Morvant, has not had a water/fire truck for more than a year.
*The Wrightson Road Fire Station, which already covers its zone and the Woodbrook fire station’s zone, must also cover the Belmont Fire Station zone with its two water/fire trucks.
*The Santa Cruz Fire Station and Morvant Fire Station also have no fire trucks.
*The San Juan Fire Station has a truck with defects.
*When the Sunday Guardian visited the Chaguaramas Fire Station on Thursday, we came across an empty garage with its doors kept upwards.
Several of the glass panels of the garage were cracked and shattered. Leaning up, without any purpose, on the garage was a fire ladder designed to allow fire officers access to high-rise buildings.
The grass around the station building, located less than 50 metres from the garage, grew widely, clearly unkept for some time.
*The garage of the Woodbrook Fire Station was empty, with nothing but a few loud yard fowl searching the oil-stained concrete floor for feed.
On the outside of the garage’s wall, to the left, was a damaged fire ladder.
In the yard of the station were seven derelict vehicles branded with the fire service logo, as well as an abandoned ambulance.
Inside the station, the computer hasn’t worked for years. Officers responding to fires use their own data plans to find burning buildings using Waze.
*The garage of the Belmont Fire Station, blocked off from the view of motorists by a black piece of cloth, was also empty.
Instead of housing a water/fire truck as intended, it has been turned into a makeshift parking spot for officers who have nowhere else safe to park given the station’s Belmont Circular Road location.
PRO Dasent said the Santa Cruz Fire Station also houses the Land Search and Rescue, and ‘has at its disposal a vehicle to respond to rescue and searches.’
Asked when the four/five fire stations without firetrucks will be getting a truck again, Dasent said “Based on procurement of appliances and parts…within four to six weeks for parts, and at present, tendering will be going out to purchase new appliances.”
Minister promises new equipment in 3 weeks
National Security Minister Fitzgerald Hinds in a newspaper report last week said equipment for the Fire Service will arrive in the country within the next three weeks.
“He had said the lead time when you order one of these custom fire tenders or water tankers would be something like 15 to 18 months. "I ordered them. The Cabinet approved it and we are expecting one of them in about three weeks and others the processes are being developed, so it’s an ongoing thing and we are expecting more as the time goes by.”
Hinds said a team of officers including the Chief Fire Officer had recently visited the Netherlands where they got to observe the final touches on the custom-built fire tenders for T&T.
He also said that the Fire Service recently got two new fire vehicles to deal with situations that may arise at both the Piarco and ANR Robinson international airports.