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Lawyers acting for firefighting bodies defended the emergency response to the Grenfell Tower fire today, at the public inquiry into the disaster.
Key points
Day four
Representatives for the Fire Brigades Union (FBU), the Fire Officers Association (FOA) and the LFB presented their verbal opening statements on the fourth day of evidence hearings at the Grenfell Inquiry this morning.
Soon after proceedings finished for the day, the BBC reported that the Metropolitan Police is investigating the LFB’s use of the ‘stay put’ police during the fire.
Speaking on behalf of LFB, Stephen Walsh said Grenfell was a “singular event” and that the scale of safety failures at the tower caused a “unique and unprecedented challenge” for firefighters.
He said that – unlike buildings with similar cladding in other parts of the world – Grenfell Tower was not designed to support an evacuation strategy in case of a fire.
Mr Walsh told the inquiry it is a “fundamental misunderstanding” to assume that the stay put policy at Grenfell could have been changed to simultaneous evacuation “at the stroke of a fire incident commander”.
Numerous factors, including the lack of a working fire lift or of an effective system to communicate the new message to residents effectively, would have made this difficult, he said.
The inquiry should question whether simultaneous evacuation was ever a “practical option” at Grenfell, Mr Walsh added.
He said stay put “is not a creation of the fire service” but a strategy they are supposed to apply when fighting fires in high rises which were built to contain fire, and that the inquiry should “urgently consider” whether refurbishments of buildings like Grenfell have undermined their integrity.
And he questioned whether it was reasonable and in the public interest to “expect fire services to develop operational policy on the presumption that buildings such as Grenfell Tower are inherently unsafe”.
He also called on the inquiry to recommend changes to fire safety regulations, including requiring the retrofitting of sprinklers in tower blocks.
FBU lawyer, Martin Seaward, said the refurbishment of Grenfell had left it “a highly combustible death trap” and said that criticisms of the emergency response to the fire “should not be exploited by those who created the danger”.
He said that neither Kensington and Chelsea Council nor Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation seemed to have planned for an evacuation strategy at Grenfell if compartmentation was breached, and that the inquiry should question whether there was also failure “at a national level” to prepare for this kind of event.
The inquiry was told that the FBU “reserves its position” as to when the stay put advice should have been changed because of the “difficulties and dangers” of evacuating the block.
Louis Browne, speaking for the FOA, said the inquiry should avoid judging firefighters’ actions on the night of the fire “with the benefit of hindsight”.
The tower’s stair and lobbies “did not create, nor were they designed to create” a safe environment for residents to evacuate the building while firefighters attempted to tackle the blaze, he added.
Mr Seaward and Mr Browne both strongly denied that racism played any part in firefighters’ actions on the night of the fire.
On Tuesday, Imran Khan, acting for a group of people bereaved by the fire and survivors, asked if there was “unconscious or some conscious racism” in the way firefighters responded to the fire.
Concluding proceedings today, Richard Millett QC, speaking on behalf of the inquiry, said the team will “give very careful consideration” to the possibility of publishing urgent recommendations before its chair, Sir Martin Moore-Bick, releases his final phase one report.
The inquiry continues.
Proceedings are due to resume with presentations from the inquiry experts on 18 June.
Closing statements
Day 85: victims' lawyers attack the fire brigade
Further expert evidence
Including some additional evidence from emergency call handlers, bereaved and relatives
Day 84: further evidence from survivors and relatives
Day 83: swift evacuation of tower possible if residents alerted
Day 82: initial fire was extinguished but then returned to the flat
Day 81: overheating fridge-freezer most likely cause of fire
Day 80: fire doors installed did not match product tested
Day 79: resident advised to stay put despite fire in flat
Day 78: insulation and cladding material below required standard
Day 77: molten plastic spread blaze down tower
Day 76: 'stay put' should be dropped when fire spreads across floors
Other witness evidence
Police, ambulance, gas suppliers, council, TMO and call room operators give evidence
Day 75: call room operators give evidence
Day 74: further evidence from TMO officers
Day 73: TMO boss failed to pass information to firefighters
Day 72: fire finally extinguished when gas switched off
Day 71: further questions over stay put advice
Day 70: the police evidence
The bereaved, survivors and relatives’ evidence
Day 69: video shows smoke billowing through fire door
Day 68: KCTMO removed self closing mechanism and never replaced it
Day 67: gaps in cladding fixed with duct tape
Day 66: 'don't fix broken system with a sticking plaster'
Day 65: survivor dragged disabled man down nine floors to safety
Day 64: KCTMO 'did not replace broken fire door'
Day 63: foam insulation inside cladding 'exposed' says survivor
Day 62: father gives harrowing account of son's death
Day 61: council’s management organisation slammed for faulty electrics
Day 60: stay put advice ‘led to deaths’, residents say
Day 59: residents describe problems with new windows
Day 58: survivor describes how daughter saved his life
Day 57: firefighter evidence ‘a slap in the face’, says survivor
Day 56: relations with contractor were ‘toxic’
Day 55: resident 'never happy' with stay-put advice
Day 54: tenant gives evidence about housing association
Day 53: stay put advice 'felt like trap'
Day 52: resident saved by son's phone call
The firefighters’ evidence
Day 51: firefighter feared encouraging residents to jump
Day 50: the LFB commissioner
Day 49: fire chief reveals frustration over lack of building plans
Day 48: internal fire spread 'bigger story' than cladding
Day 47: fire officer considered evacuating crews over building collapse fears
Day 46: 'we were improvising' senior firefighter admits
Day 45: firefighter urged for abandonment of 'stay put' policy
Day 44: firefighter recalls radio signal difficulties
Day 43: call hander 'uncomfortable' with insisting residents stay put
Day 42: residents only told to leave if they called fire brigade back
Day 41: breathing equipment delay 'hampered rescues on upper floors'
Day 40: chiefs told firefighters to abandon policy
Day 39: firefighters reveal dramatic rescue of children
Day 38: firefighters issue aplogies to families
Day 37: council 'unable to provide tower plans'
Day 36: QC defends inquiry process
Day 35: Javid would welcome interim recommendations
Day 34: water from hose 'too weak' to reach the flames
Day 33: 'oh my god, we've been telling people to stay put'
Day 32: further fire fighter describes lack of equipment and low water pressure
Day 31: 'incredibly difficult' task of recording information outlined
Day 30: struggle to maintain control over rescue operation described
Day 29: fire service 'overwhelmed' by survival guidance calls
Day 28: 'the building beat us'
Day 27: firefighters 'forced to abandon plans to reach roof'
Day 26: poor signage hindered rescue efforts
Day 25: water pressure left firefighting equipment 'like garden hose'
Day 24: decision to abandon 'stay put' explored
Day 23: TV images 'could have assissted' rescue effort
Day 22: description of hectic scenes in the control centre
Day 21: account from the fire service 'nerve centre'
Day 20: firefighter describes 'huge volume' of calls from trapped residents
Day 19: firefighter 'given no training on cladding fires'
Day 18: evacuation would have been 'huge catastrophe'
Day 17: firefighters describe access and lift issues
Day 16: scenes of carnage likened to 9/11
Day 15: firefighters recount trauma of survival guidance calls
Day 14: firefighters describe spread of blaze
Day 13: firefighters recall radio difficulties
Day 12: "it was like a war zone"
Day 11: questions raised over fire fighters' radios
Day 10: watch manager emotional under questioning
Day nine: lead firefighter 'not trained in stay put policy'
The expert reports: authors give evidence to inquiry
Day eight: where the fire started
Day seven: what was in the cladding?
Day six: the cause and spread of the fire
Day five: expert highlights key issues
Day four: firefighters defend response to fire
Day three: council and contractors appear for the first time
Day two: lawyers for the survivors make their case
Day one: expert evidence released on cladding and stay put
The commemoration hearings
30 May: Grenfell Council 'recognised it should not house disabled victim above four storeys'
29 May: Anger on day six of the Grenfell Inquiry
25 May: Grenfell families 'forced to live in chimney with stay put policy'
24 May: Grenfell family complained about father being housed on 17th floor
23 May: Tributes to children on third day of Grenfell hearings
22 May: Emotions run high as Grenfell bereaved shown footage of the tower burning
21 May: Grenfell victims share tributes as inquiry opens