Mountain Rescue raises awareness in parliament

Posted by Tina Gardner on 30/10/2013

Representatives of mountain and cave rescue teams from across England and Wales are in parliament this week highlighting the breadth of rescues they carry out and the funding gap.

David Allen, chairman of Mountain Rescue England and Wales (MREW) said “We’re keen to show our representatives in government just how many search and rescue situations involve our volunteer members.  
 
"We’ve been involved in rescues from ravines, rivers and mineshafts and even searches across golf courses and in town centre high streets.  We get involved in supporting the ambulance service in bad weather, especially on roads affected by snow and ice, in searches for vulnerable adults and children and in traumatic situations such as the recovery of suicide and accident victims.  It’s certainly not all about mountains and outdoor sports.”
 
But the exhibition in the upper waiting hall in the palace of Westminster and Tuesday night’s reception are not just about giving MPs a clearer understanding of the work of mountain and cave rescue teams; there is also an urgent need to review the funding of this essential service.
 
“Last year, volunteer rescuers gave 13,400 hours to the search for April Jones,” said head of fundraising, Mike France, “and that’s about 1,075 days of searchers’ unpaid absence from their work and families.  Those same people are available 24/7 throughout the year for local call outs and they have to train for all these different situations and needs so it seems crazy that they also have to find time for fundraising just to keep their teams going.”
 
Mike continues: “There is a huge discrepancy between the financial support given by government to Scottish rescuers – about £16,480 per team – and the much more limited funding to English teams of just £2,246 per team.  Welsh teams receive a small amount extra after recent decisions in the Welsh Assembly but we’re campaigning in Westminster for MPs to recognise the needs in both England and Wales.  
 
"If government could guarantee a level of funding from the public purse closer to the Scottish figure, we’d be able to underwrite investments in vehicles and essential kit and subsidise essential training and insurance.  We want to be able to ensure that our 3,600 or so volunteer rescuers across England and Wales can focus their time and resources on getting the job done rather than having to worry about fundraising.”
 
David, Mike and colleagues from cave and mountain rescue across England and Wales are in Parliament from Monday 28 October to Friday 1 November.  Rory Stewart, MP for Penrith and the Border hosted a reception on behalf of MREW on Tuesday afternoon.
 
“We get great support from the MPs local to our rescue teams and representing the key areas for our more obvious work such as North Wales and the Lake District,” says David Allen, “and we’re hoping to extend this knowledge and support throughout parliament this week.”
 
Taken from press release


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03/11/2013
Anything that raises the profile of MRE&W is great, and the message that we do much more than rescue walkers and climbers needs to be disseminated more widely too.

Perhaps surprisingly, though, the push for some form of Government funding lacks universal support amongst many involved in MR. There are fears that Government money will necesarily come with strings attached. We feel that MRE&W would be better off maintaining their independence, both as an organisation, and as members of the wider mountaineering community. In time, such funding could alter the nature of the organisation profoundly. Several years ago the late Pete Livesey wrote in High magazine, warning of a future where a state funded rescue service had to be paid for insurance.

Contrast this approach with the RNLI, who make a point of not receiving money from the public purse, and almost certainly receive more in donations and legacies as a result. I suspect the annual operating costs of a fleet of lifeboats and a corps of lifeguards would probably fund every MR team in the country for a decade. There are some very significant differences in the way MRE&W teams are funded, as very little funding comes from the parent organisation, and most of the money is raised by teams for themselves. If MRE&W wants to fund teams better, they should be more confident in their ability to emulate some of the highly the successful approaches taken by the RNLI, rather than taking us up this potentially quite dangerous path.

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