FIREMEN FORCED TO SILENCE THEIR SIRENS
Firemen have been banned from speeding to some emergencies with blue lights flashing and sirens blaring because of road safety fears.
Crews have been told to travel silently and within speed limits when there is 'no immediate threat to life or property'.
But critics of the policy, introduced last week across South Yorkshire, claim it could put emergency workers and members of the public in unnecessary danger.
Tony Clay, the county brigade's head of operational standards and safety, said the aim was to reduce the number of road accidents involving fire engines. He said crews would obey all traffic regulations and keep lights and sirens off when attending 'small or secondary fire incidents' where the blaze is not 'in proximity to a building'.
The Fire Brigades Union has condemned the policy, the first of its kind in the country, saying, 'almost every fire starts as an insignificant fire'.