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ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

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ECCs in the judicial spotlight!. Michael Eburn ANU College of Law. Aim. To review the fate of ECCs/IMTs in post fire event judicial reviews. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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ECCs in the judicial spotlight! Michael Eburn ANU College of Law
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Page 1: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Michael EburnANU College of Law

Page 2: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Aim• To review the fate of ECCs/IMTs in post fire event judicial

reviews.• How? Review 23 post fire Royal Commissions,

Parliamentary or Coronial reviews from 1939 to 2010. How did the ECC/IMT fare? Recommendations? Lessons to be learned?

Page 3: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

953 Recommendations

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Page 4: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Fire Agency management

IMTs & ICCs Training Management & funding

OH & S Local expertise0

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Page 5: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Recurring themes• Use standard terms;• Members of the IMT from different organisations have to

train together;• The IMT has to consider as part of its function, delivering

warnings to local communities;• ECC needs to physically suitable and co-located with

other ECCs (eg MECC and Police operations);• People need to be trained to the level of responsibility (eg

only trained Level 3 Controllers to be Level 3 Controllers; regardless of their organisation).

Page 6: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

How do the Commissions come to these conclusions?They review what agency policy documents say will happen, and compare it to what did happen…

Page 7: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Wangarry (SA) fires Chapter 12 – reviewed legislation and SOPs (including documents on the role of the IMT and the Incident controller)Chapter 13 – reviewed the action of the IMT and compared the response to the policy documents.

Page 8: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Wangarry (SA) fires“… the single most powerful factor in the deaths of the nine deceased was the escape of fire from the swamp area ... That fire was able to escape … by the failure to identify and recognise the considerable risk to the community that was posed by the presence of fire … and by the extreme weather that was forecast for the Tuesday… What action that was taken to identify that risk and to minimise it was characterised by facile solutions to a complex problem. Essentially, the potential for dangerous fire to emanate from the swamp into Areas A and C was simply not properly addressed.”

Page 9: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

“… the two most dangerous areas of the overnight fireground ... were the two areas that were the subject of neglect, as exemplified by the fact that there was not even a Sector Commander for Area C until the Tuesday morning and even then the Sector Commander’s appointment was made without that person’s knowledge. As far as Area A is concerned, it was part of a sector that was never properly identified as such to the Sector Commander.”

Page 10: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Who was the IC?The former Group Officer (of 25 years) had stood down from that role; but he was at the ICC in CFS Dress Uniform having come direct from a meeting in Adelaide.

Page 11: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Who was the IC?“It would be naïve to think that [his] air of authority and his esteem as the most senior voluntary fire firefighter on the Lower Eyre Peninsula had evaporated overnight. … During the course of the Inquest, the suggestion was made that [he] was in many senses the defacto Incident Controller. This appears to have been the perception of a number of persons present at the Wanilla Hall that evening. … The roles of the various participants at Wanilla Hall and the identification of those roles would not have been helped by the fact that no-one wore tabards depicting their functions ...”

Page 12: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Who was who?“This important extension of the boundary of the Swampy Sector was never communicated to either Mr R or Mr C. The consequence was that Area A and the swamp within Area A remained unattended overnight and into the following day. This is no reflection on Mr R or Mr C. They simply were not told that they had any responsibility in relation to Area A or the swamp adjacent to it. …Mr L was meant to be the Planning Officer under AIIMS. Mr L claims that he did not know of that fact.”

Page 13: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Handover“[The Incident Controller] was to leave the Wanilla Hall at a time well before the arrival of the relieving Incident Controller … which is said to be, and indeed is, an extraordinary thing … As to who the Incident Controller was during the hiatus … is unclear.”

Page 14: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

The need to supervise IMTs“It is clearly not enough for the paid regional staff merely to act as conduits for information between volunteer Incident Management Teams and State Headquarters.”

Page 15: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

But that must have been an extreme case... But consider2003 ACT coroner’s inquest – failures by IMT to properly consider the risk; to properly plan for the predicted outbreak of fire; plan based on ‘wishful thinking’.2007 Boorabin fires – failure to communicate within the IMT; failure to take account of forecast wind changes; failure to seek assistance from FESA; failure to involve police2009 Victorian Bushfires Royal Commission – failures by IMT to consider community safety; failure for planning information to be conveyed to IC; lack of supervision of IMT by Chief Officers; failure to plan for the predicted wind change;

Page 16: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

So what happens?2003 Canberra inquest - Adverse comments and significant litigation between the ACT IMT and the Coroner;2007 Booorabin Fires, the entire IMT was described as ‘incompetent’;2009 Royal Commission – fate of Chief Officers and Police Commissioner in the public eye?

Page 17: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

OK, but these are cases where it all went wrong....“It has to be also considered that if there had been a favourable outcome in this fire … a ‘routine outcome’, it is unlikely that the members of the Incident Management Teams would have been accorded accolades in any sense proportionate to the opprobrium that they have now had to endure.” But when it goes wrong, no-one blames or criticises the responders on the fire ground; the buck stops with the IMT – even volunteers.

Page 18: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

What to do...Ensure effective communication across the IMT;Record everything; and keep the records;Consider recommendations for Audit Teams, Safety officers and media officers.Remember no-one blames or criticises the fire fighters on the fire ground; the buck stops with you – even volunteers.

Page 19: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Volunteers are not immune“While recognising that without voluntary workers the CFS would cease to function …it also has to be recognised that volunteerism is not the same thing as amateurism. Given the onerous statutory responsibilities that the CFS carries out, although carried out as it is by voluntary workers for the most part, it is difficult to support any conclusion other than that volunteer individuals who aspire to positions of seniority within the volunteer ranks, and who aspire to perform tasks of significant responsibility during the course of incidents, should be anything other than trained and competent and act as part of a team.”

Page 20: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

“… while there may be difficulties in terms of the accountability of volunteers, in as much as they might simply walk away if any sanction is to be visited on them, it does not mean that in the context of an inquiry such as this, their actions are immune from scrutiny and analysis. … Thus, while it is regrettable that on occasions the actions and failings of certain individuals have to be spelt out, especially in a setting where those actions and failings have occurred in a context of voluntary work, it is in the interests of justice and in the public interest that such a process has to occur.”

Page 21: ECCs in the judicial spotlight!

Questions? Comments? Discussion?Thank you for your attention.

Michael EburnANU College of Law &Fenner School of Environment and Society.


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