Jump to content

Fire and Emergency New Zealand

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fire and Emergency New Zealand
Operational area
CountryNew Zealand
Agency overview[2]
Established1 July 2017 (2017-07-01)
Annual calls84,688 (2020–21)[1]: 10 
Employees1634 (2020-21) [1]: 86 
Staffing
  • 1854 career firefighters[1]: 35 
  • 11,883 volunteer firefighters[1]: 35 
Chief executive officerKerry Gregory
MottoWhakaratonga Iwi – Serving our people
Facilities and equipment
Stations653 [3]
Website
fireandemergency.nz

Fire and Emergency New Zealand is New Zealand's main firefighting and emergency services body.

Fire and Emergency was formally established on 1 July 2017, after the New Zealand Fire Service, the National Rural Fire Authority, and 38 rural fire districts and territorial authorities amalgamated to form one new organisation.[4][5] It has nationwide responsibility for fire safety, firefighting, hazardous substance incident response, vehicle extrication and urban search and rescue.

History

[edit]

New Zealand's first volunteer fire brigade was established by Mr Asher Asher, a Jewish emigrant from London, in Auckland in 1854, with volunteer fire brigades established in Christchurch in 1860, Dunedin in 1861, and in Wellington in 1865. The Municipal Corporations Act 1867 allowed borough councils to establish fire brigades and appoint fire inspectors, starting the first paid fire brigades. The Fire Brigades Act 1906 set up local fire boards, and levied central government, local authorities and insurance companies to cover costs.[6]

During the summer of 1945/46, a large scrub and forest fire threatened the town of Taupō and blocked the Rotorua–Taupō Road. In response, the Forest and Rural Fires Act 1947 established the modern rural firefighting force.[7]

On 18 November 1947, Christchurch's Ballantynes department store was gutted by fire, killing 41 employees. The resulting Royal Commission of Inquiry found that the store' evacuation scheme was inadequate, the fire brigade was slow to be informed of the fire, and the firefighters were not properly trained or equipped.[8] The Commission proposed a national fire service, however this was rejected. The Fire Services Act 1949 instead set up the Fire Service Council to coordinate urban fire brigades, direct firefighter training and distribute equipment. In 1958, the first national training school for firefighters was established. On 29 September 1958, the first 111 emergency telephone service was introduced covering Masterton and Carterton, and was gradually expanded nationwide through the 1960s and 1970s.[7]

The Fire Service Act 1975 replaced the Fire Service Council with a new Fire Service Commission, and merged local fire boards and urban volunteer fire brigades into a single entity, the New Zealand Fire Service.

The Forest and Rural Fires Act 1977 established the National Rural Fire Authority under the New Zealand Fire Service Commission to coordinate the various rural fire authorities.[7]

Fire and Emergency was formally established on 1 July 2017, merging the New Zealand Fire Service, the National Rural Fire Authority, and 38 rural fire districts and territorial authorities.[4][5]

An independent report by Judge Coral Shaw into the culture of Fire and Emergency New Zealand released in January 2019 found a widespread culture of bullying and harassment, including sexism and racism. The Chief Executive of Fire and Emergency noted the report was "wide ranging and confronting."[9]

Governance

[edit]

Fire and Emergency is a Crown entity and is governed by a Crown Appointed Board. The Minister for Internal Affairs is the minister responsible for Fire and Emergency. The CEO is appointed by the State Services Commissioner. The Executive Leadership Team is responsible for service delivery and implementation in accordance with the Fire and Emergency Act.

Roles and functions

[edit]
Fire and Emergency New Zealand MAN Type 3 Appliance

The main functions of Fire and Emergency are those where it has responsibility to respond, and has lead responsibility in a multi-agency emergency. These include:[10]

  • firefighting
  • fire safety and prevention
  • Hazardous Materials (HAZMAT) – The containment of a hazardous substance and decontamination of an environment or persons affected by a hazardous substance.
  • vehicle extrication – Extrication of entrapped persons in the aftermath of a motor vehicle accident
  • urban search and rescue (USAR) – Fire and Emergency NZ is the lead agency for New Zealand USAR operations (Civil Defence & Emergency Management Act 2002) They also manage three USAR Task Force level teams, providing communications and resources. Being the lead agency, Fire and Emergency NZ also coordinates the 17 NZ Response Teams when tasked to provide light USAR support. Paid career firefighters have a baseline level of training in USAR techniques and make up the vast majority of the actual USAR team members.

Fire and Emergency also has a number of additional functions which it may assist in, but not at the compromise of its main functions. These are typically functions where another agency has lead responsibility in a multi-agency emergency. These additional function include:[11]

  • medical first response – Responding to medical emergencies in smaller communities where there is no local ambulance service, as well as in the main centres when an ambulance is unavailable or will be significantly delayed in attending an incident.
  • medical co-response – Co-responding with ambulance services to "Code Purple" emergencies (e.g. cardiac and respiratory arrest)
  • rescue (high angle line, confined spaces, swift water, etc.) – Rescue from the side of buildings; dangerous terrain (cliff/rock faces, etc.)
  • natural disaster response – Addressing the problems caused by heavy rain and high winds (lifted roofing, power lines and trees down onto properties or across roadways, flooding)

Fire and Emergency's jurisdiction covers the majority of New Zealand's land mass. The Department of Conservation is no longer responsible for fires as Fire and Emergency are the fire authority for all public conservation land.[12] DOC support Fire and Emergency in this function. This means any fire that starts or develops on public conservation land will be controlled by Fire and Emergency under their authority, and DOC will support them. New Zealand Defence Force are responsible for fire services covering the land under their control [citation needed]. Industry fire brigades provide fire services to certain facilities such as major airports and industrial plants. Fire and Emergency provides mutual assistance to these brigades.

Staffing

[edit]

Career staff

[edit]

Fire and Emergency New Zealand employ 1,854 professional career firefighters as well as 993 management and support staff.[1][page needed]

Each career fire station has a number of watches (shifts). Full-time career stations have four watches, red, brown, blue and green, rotating on a "four-on four-off" schedule: two 10-hour day shifts, followed by two 14-hour night shifts, followed by four days off. However, most Career districts now rely on calling back off duty staff to provide additional resources at any large scale or long duration incident. Combination career and volunteer stations may have had a yellow watch, in which career staff work four 10-hour day shifts per calendar week, having one weekday, Saturday and Sunday off. Non-operational staff were "black watch", and work a regular 40-hour week.

Career Firefighters responded to 80% of all the incidents Fire and Emergency attend and protect 80% of the population.

Career firefighters numbers were relatively stable with low turnover. Fire and Emergency usually recruit twice-yearly, and received up to 700 applications for just 48 positions on each intake, making competition high and job prospects poor compared to other industries. Initial training for career firefighters was done on an intensive 12-week residential course at the national training centre in Rotorua that covered not only traditional firefighting subjects but others required of a modern professional Fire and Rescue Service. Topics such as; urban search and rescue (USAR), motor vehicle extrication and hazardous materials.

Career firefighters provided the Fire and Emergency personnel that staff the nations specialised USAR Response teams. Additional specialised training was provided for these personnel, however all paid career firefighters were trained to a baseline USAR 'Responder' level.

Volunteers

[edit]

Career firefighters make up only 20 percent of Fire and Emergency's firefighting manpower; the remaining 80 percent of firefighters are volunteers, who received no payment for their time or labour. 11,847 Rural and Urban Volunteer firefighters mainly serve small towns, communities and outer suburbs which career stations do not cover, and responded to 20% of all incidents Fire and Emergency attended.[citation needed]

Ranks and insignia

[edit]

The epaulette markings used by Fire and Emergency are similar to those used by the New Zealand Police and the New Zealand Army, except for the use of impellers instead of pips and bars in place of chevrons. The current colour scheme for helmets was rolled out in late 2013, with the intention to make it easier to identify the command structure at a large-scale, multi-agency incident.[13]

Title Epaulette[14] Cap[15] Gorgets[15] Helmet[14] Approximate equivalent
LFB FDNY
National Commander Silver crossed sword and scabbard below a crown Two rows of laurel leaves Black oak leaves on a red background (also worn on the shirt in working dress) Black helmet with a label reading National Commander Commissioner Chief of Department
Deputy National Commander Silver crossed sword and scabbard Two rows of laurel leaves Black oak leaves on a red background (also worn on the shirt in working dress Black helmet with a label reading Deputy National Commander
Assistant National Commander Three impellers in a triangle below a crown Two rows of laurel leaves Black oak leaves on a red background (also worn on the shirt in working dress) Silver helmet, two blue bands and a label reading Assistant National Commander Assistant Commissioner Assistant Chief
District Manager/

Area Commander

Box border, One impeller, crown Two rows of laurel leaves Black oak leaves on a red background Silver helmet with one blue band and a label reading Commander/District Manager Group Commander Division Chief
Group Manager/ Assistant Area Commander Box border, Three impellers One row of laurel leaves Red oak leaves on a black background Plain Silver helmet with a label reading Assistant Commander/Group Manager Station Commander Battalion Chief
Chief Fire Officer (Volunteer) Two small impellers above an impeller with laurel Two rows of laurel leaves Red oak leaves on a black background White helmet, two blue bands and a label reading Chief Fire Officer Station Commander Battalion Chief
Deputy Chief Fire Officer (Volunteer) Small impeller above an impeller with laurel One row of laurel leaves Red oak leaves on a black background White helmet with one blue band and a label reading Deputy Chief Fire Officer
Senior Station Officer Two impellers Plain None Red helmet with two blue bands or
Blue helmet with two yellow bands (Operational Support)
Station Officer Captain
Station Officer One impeller Plain None Red helmet with one blue band or
Blue helmet with one yellow band (Operational Support)
Sub-Officer Lieutenant
Senior Firefighter Two bars Plain None Yellow helmet with two red bands or
Blue helmet with two red bands (Operational Support)
Leading Firefighter Firefighter
Qualified Firefighter One bar Plain None Yellow helmet with one red stripe or
Blue helmet with one red stripe (Operational Support)
Firefighter Firefighter
Firefighter One Bar outline Plain None Plain Yellow helmet or

Plain Blue helmet (Operational Support)

Firefighter Firefighter
Recruit Firefighter Blank with 'RECRUIT' Plain None Fluorescent green helmet with black crest Probationary Firefighter

Appliances and vehicles

[edit]

The basic urban appliance in New Zealand is the Pump Tender and the Pump Rescue Tender. The Pump Tender is primarily equipped for fires, while the Pump Rescue Tender is additionally equipped with rescue equipment for motor vehicle accidents and vehicle extrication.

Class Chassis make and model[3][user-generated source] Body manufacturer[3][user-generated source] Number[16][obsolete source][3][user-generated source]
(as of Feb 2021)[user-generated source]
Image[17]
Type 1 "Light" Pump Iveco Eurocargo Fraser Fire & Rescue, Lower Hutt 352
Type 2 "Medium" Pump Iveco Eurocargo Fraser Fire & Rescue, Lower Hutt 250
Type 3 "Heavy" Pump MAN TGM
Scania P-series
Fraser Fire & Rescue, Lower Hutt
Mills-Tui, Rotorua
218
Type 4 "Heavy Aerial" Pump Scania P-series Fraser Fire & Rescue, Lower Hutt 18
Type 5 Hydraulic Elevating Platform Mercedes Benz 2633

Scania P-series

Bronto Skylift, Tampere, Finland 5
Type 6 Turntable Ladder Spartan Charger Lowes Industries, Christchurch 2
Ultralight Pump Mitsubishi Fuso Canter Mills-Tui, Rotorua 17
Rural Medium Appliance Isuzu FSS-500 Lockheed Martin 150
Rural Large Appliance Isuzu JCS 420 29
Water Tanker Scania P-series
Volvo FM
Hino 500
Tanker Engineering, Auckland
Mills-Tui, Rotorua
Fraser Fire & Rescue, Lower Hutt
Lowes Industries, Christchurch
Promax, Kerikeri
167
Hazmat / Command Unit DAF LF Custom Motorbodies, Auckland 18
Incident Support Vehicle Iveco Eurocargo
Mitsubishi Fuso Canter

Hino 500

Mills-Tui, Rotorua 10
Light Response Vehicle Iveco Daily SPEL, Trentham 8
Hose Layer Hino 500
Iveco Eurocargo
Bedford MK3
Hale Motorbodies, Lower Hutt
Jones O'dell Motor Bodies, Auckland
4
Command Unit Mitsubishi FP270 1
Foam Tender Mitsubishi Fuso Canter
Scania P-series
Aviation Fire Services
Fraser Fire & Rescue
2
BA Tender Iveco Eurocargo
Mitsubishi Fuso Canter
Custom Motorbodies, Auckland
Mills-Tui, Rotorua
2
Lighting Unit Isuzu Forward
Hino FD
Tanker, Engineering
Custom Motorbodies, Auckland
2
Hazmat Unit Hino F-series Unknown 1
Technical Rescue Tender Dennis Sabre John Dennis Coachbuilders 1
Salvage Tender Iveco Eurocargo,

Isuzu Elf

Custom Motorbodies, Auckland 2

Vehicle callsigns

[edit]
Fire and Emergency New Zealand Greerton 751

Operational Fire and Emergency vehicles have a three-digit or four-digit callsign. The first two numbers represent the station the vehicle is based at, while the last one or two digits represent the vehicle function and designation. For example, Auckland City fire station's main appliance is Auckland City 207: "20" is the designation for Auckland City station; and "7" representing the type of appliance – a pump rescue tender.[18]


This is a list of commonly encountered appliance callsigns (the letter, in this case, meaning the appliance type):

Pump types 1 through 3, for example 831 (The main pump appliance at East Coast Bays Station). xx1 is usually a station's primary pump. xx2 is almost always a secondary pump. Pumps are somewhat limited in their specialised firefighting abilities, for example, highrise firefighting or forestry firefighting. In terms of local fires, for example, a small house fire, or car fire, the pump has more than enough equipment to suffice. A type 3 heavy pump, mainly found in larger cities with career crews carries about 1500 litres of water,[19] whereas a smaller type 1 or 2, light and medium respectively, each carry about 2000 litres,[20][21] as these trucks usually respond to incidents in areas with unreticluated water supplies. The former contains much more equipment, as career firefighters receive much more training,;[22] whereas volunteers receive less at a national level. This means that career firefighters have a much higher overall skill and training level. One example of this is that a type three has two High-Pressure Deliveries (HPD), whereas a type 1 or 2 only has one; an HPD is a high-pressure hose, which unravels from the truck directly. The HPD is usually one of the first pieces of equipment used at a firefighting event.

Notable incidents

[edit]

Major notable incidents where Fire and Emergency or its predecessors have played a significant role include:

  • Auckland Central fire, 1858 – a fire broke out in central Auckland, eventually destroying an entire city block.[23]
  • Parliament Buildings fire, 1907 – fire broke out around 2 a.m. on 11 December 1907. The building could not be saved.[24]
  • Seacliff Lunatic Asylum fire, 1942 – on the evening of 8 December 1942, a fire broke out in Ward 5 at the Seacliff Lunatic Asylum, north of Dunedin, killing 28 of the 39 female patients housed within. A shortage of nursing staff due to World War II, as well as the lack of sprinklers in the ward, contributed to the deaths.
  • Ballantyne's fire, 1947 – on 18 November 1947, a fire broke out at the Ballantyne's department store in central Christchurch, killing 41 people. It remains the deadliest fire in New Zealand.
  • Sprott House fire, 1969 – on 26 July 1969, a fire broke out at the Sprott House rest home in Karori, Wellington, killing seven of the 21 residents. As a result, the Fire Safety (Evacuation of Buildings) Regulations 1970 were made, making sprinklers, automatic alarms and evacuation schemes compulsory for institutions housing more than 20 people.[7]
  • ICI Riverview fire, 1984 – on 21 December 1984, a fire broke out at the ICI Riverview chemical warehouse in Mount Wellington, Auckland, killing one person. Thirty-one firefighters suffered ill effects from the toxic fumes given out in the fire.
  • Avondale College fire, 1990 – on the evening of 10 April 1990, a fire broke out at Avondale College in Auckland, destroying the administration block, assembly hall, gymnasium, and thirteen classrooms. At its peak, 200 firefighters and 26 fire appliances fought the blaze.[25]
  • Wither Hills fire, 2000 – The main fire, which broke out in the Wither Hills behind Blenheim, swept across more than 6500ha, destroying farmland and wiping out stock.[26]
  • Tamahere coolstore fire, 2008 – on 5 April 2008, Hamilton firefighters were called out to a fire alarm activation at the Icepak Coolstores southeast of the city at Tamahere. While investigating the cause of the alarm the propane-based refrigerant ignited explosively, injuring all eight firefighters and destroying one fire engine. One firefighter, Senior Station Officer Derek Lovell, later died in hospital as a result of his injuries. The fire was upgraded to a fifth-alarm response, with appliances coming from as far afield as Onehunga and Taupō. A water tender from nearby Hamilton Airport and Fonterra milk tankers were also called in to assist with water supply. Icepak Coolstores and the refrigeration company contracted to maintain the coolstores pleaded guilty to health and safety breaches, and combined were ordered to pay $393,000 in fines and reparation.[27]
  • Southdown Freezing Works fire, 2008 – on 20 December 2008, Auckland firefighters were called out to a reported building fire in the suburb of Southdown. Upon crews arriving, a call was made to transmit a sixth-alarm response. Almost every crew from all over Auckland responded with at least two appliances coming from Rotorua and Hamilton. There was suspected asbestos inside some of the buildings that were alight, causing it to feed the fire.[28][29]
  • Port Hills fire, 2017 – on the evening of 13 February 2017, two separate fires, several kilometres apart, started on the Port Hills near Christchurch. The two fires merged on 15 February and by the time the fire was brought under control on 19 February, it had burned over 2000 hectares of land and destroyed 11 houses. One helicopter crashed while helping to fight the fires, causing the death of the pilot.
  • Pigeon Valley fire, 2019 – on the afternoon of 5 February 2019, a fire broke out in a paddock in Pigeon Valley near Wakefield. The fire doubled in size overnight. At its height it covered 2400 hectares, and was the largest wildfire seen in New Zealand in sixty years. It prompted the declaration of a state of emergency. By February 6 it had been brought under control, with the fire extinguished on the surface for some time, but by 14 February 133 homes were still off limits with residents unable to return.[30] Fire crews continued working on underground hot spots into March. One helicopter crashed during the course of the fire injuring its pilot. It is believed to be the largest wildfire in New Zealand history.[30][31]
  • New Zealand International Convention Centre fire, 2019 – at approximately 13:15 on 22 October 2019, a fire started on the roof of the under-construction International Convention Centre in downtown Auckland. With strong winds gusting through the city, the fire grew rapidly and by 15:30 had escalated up to a sixth alarm;[32] the first time since 2008's Southdown fire that this alarm level had been used. The fire was officially declared "under control" by Fire and Emergency late on the afternoon of 23 October,[citation needed] but flare-ups continued until the evening of 28 October.[citation needed]
  • Loafers Lodge fire, 2023 – at 12:25 a.m. on 16 May 2023, a fire started in Loafers Lodge in Wellington killing multiple residents of the lodge.

Public safety campaigns

[edit]

A television campaign in 2002, named "Speed of Fire" had multiple clips of a house fire which were spread throughout an advertisement break, showing how fires spread in real time. It showed how house fires can fill a house in less than three minutes, which is about the same duration of advertisement breaks. The advertisement break started with a mother dropping a cigarette in her chair after leaving the room for the television break, and at the end of the television break, the house was engulfed in flames. It received a "Best use of television" award at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity.[33][34] There was also a 2012 version where the mother placed a clothes rack in front of a heater.[35][better source needed]

In 2012 the Fire Service had a campaign with the slogan "Could you live with yourself?". The goal was to decrease the number of fire-related injuries and fatalities by increasing the number of working smoke alarms in the homes of New Zealand. It put attention to the fact that house fires can lead to long-lasting health consequences rather than just death, featuring a father who did not have working fire alarms, causing his daughter to be permanently scarred after a house fire.[36] It has been described as one of New Zealand's most "tear-jerking ads".[37]

Between 15 April and the end of June in 2020, an 30-second advertisement campaign on YouTube, TVNZ+ and digital billboards was rolled out. It was called "Switch off before you walk off", featuring four people cooking who eventually got distracted by children, television, phone calls and tiredness and left their cooking unattended, causing a house fire.[38]

In 2021, a three-minute television advertisement carried out, taking up the entire advertisement break on television. It featured a family trying to escape their house, focusing on needing an escape plan and how a house fire can become deadly in three minutes.[39][40][41] Between 25 and 28 October, a three-step escape plan campaign was on television, TVNZ+ and radio, encouraging people to create an escape plan in three minutes – create a first escape route, a second escape route, and a meeting place.[42]

Between 7 March and April[vague], an advertisement created by FCB for Fire and Emergency NZ with the message "Firefighters Don’t Like Fire Movies", expressing that fires in the real world spread much faster than in movies, which means that people do not have the time to plan the heroic escapes seen in film. There was also a Te Reo version for Whakaata Māori.[41]

Between 27 November 2022 and 7 January 2023, Fire and Emergency NZ rolled out a social media advertising campaign named "You're cooked" where people under the influence of alcohol cook recipes given to them. It had the goal of teaching people how easy it is to start a fire while intoxicated.[43]

On 15 August 2023 Fire and Emergency NZ a carried out a controlled house fire live on the Seven Sharp television show with the purpose of teaching viewers about dangers of lithium-ion batteries and how quickly fires spread. The fire was started from an electric scooter, and the house was in Levin, which was designated for demolition before the broadcast.[44][45][46]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e "Annual report for the year ending 30 June 2021" (PDF). Fire and Emergency New Zealand. Retrieved 24 November 2021.
  2. ^ "Fact Sheet: Our People" (PDF). Retrieved 3 July 2017.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ a b c d "Detailed List of Appliances in operation – February 2021".
  4. ^ a b "Radical overhaul for Fire Service under new bill". New Zealand Law Society. 5 May 2017. Archived from the original on 28 July 2017. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  5. ^ a b Weber, Adriana (30 June 2017). "'Big day' as NZ's fire services merge". Stuff. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  6. ^ Swarbrick, Nancy. "Fires and fire services – Early fire services". teara.govt.nz. Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand.
  7. ^ a b c d Swarbrick, Nancy. "Towards a national fire service – Early fire services". teara.govt.nz. Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand.
  8. ^ Swarbrick, Nancy. "Fires in the 1940s – Early fire services". teara.govt.nz. Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand.
  9. ^ George, Damian (24 January 2019). "Fire and Emergency New Zealand staff bullied, harassed – report". Stuff. Retrieved 21 April 2020.
  10. ^ Fire and Emergency New Zealand Act 2017, section 11
  11. ^ Fire and Emergency New Zealand Act 2017, section 12
  12. ^ DOC's role in managing fires on public conservation land Departement of Conservation
  13. ^ "Heads Up" (PDF). Fire + Rescue (94). New Zealand Fire Service: 7. August 2013. ISSN 1176-6670. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 May 2017.
  14. ^ a b "Rank insignia". New Zealand Fire Service. Archived from the original on 2 May 2017.
  15. ^ a b "Rank Insignia" (PDF). Fire and Emergency New Zealand.
  16. ^ "Detailed List of Appliances in operation – August 2017". 2 August 2017.
  17. ^ "111emergency.co.nz, Photos used with permission from Derek Quinn, Owner". Archived from the original on 25 December 2020. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  18. ^ https://fyi.org.nz/request/7480-appliance-type-codes | OIA request into appliance types and the significance of their numbers.
  19. ^ https://www.fraser.org.nz/fenz-type-3/ Archived 3 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine | FENZ's main bodybuilder, Fraser fire and engineering's site, with a small fact sheet about the pump
  20. ^ https://www.fraser.org.nz/new-zealand-fire-service-type-1-appliance/ Archived 3 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine | Type 1 appliance fact sheet
  21. ^ https://www.fraser.org.nz/new-zealand-fire-service-type-2-appliance/ Archived 3 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine | Type 2 appliance fact sheet
  22. ^ https://www.fireandemergency.nz/work-for-us/current-testing-dates/ | FENZ's website showing part of the recruiting and training processes
  23. ^ "Destructive fire in Auckland". Taranaki Herald – archived by PapersPast. 24 July 1858. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  24. ^ Sound: the 1907 fire at Parliament Buildings New Zealand History
  25. ^ Bilby, Linley; Guyan, Claire (11 April 1990). "College 'down but not out'". Auckland Star. p. A1.
  26. ^ Marlborough's infernos tamed New Zealand Herald 28 December 2020
  27. ^ "Companies, director sentenced over fatal coolstore fire". 15 December 2009. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  28. ^ "Major fire at Auckland freezing works". 14 May 2010. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  29. ^ "Southdown Freezing Works 6th Alarm- 2008". 20 December 2008. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  30. ^ a b "Pigeon Valley residents returning home as fire recedes". 14 February 2019.
  31. ^ "Pigeon Valley Fire Update 74".
  32. ^ "As it happened: SkyCity convention centre fire in Auckland". Newshub. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
  33. ^ "Saatchi & Saatchi AWARDED at CANNES". Scoop. 20 June 2003. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  34. ^ Zealand, Saatchi & Saatchi New Zealand New, New Zealand Fire Service – "Speed of Fire", retrieved 16 August 2023
  35. ^ The Speed of Fire (2012), 2 December 2014, retrieved 16 August 2023
  36. ^ "New Zealand Fire Service launches 'Could you live with yourself?' campaign to promote smoke alarms via M&C Saatchi, Auckland". Campaign Brief. 19 March 2012. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  37. ^ "New Zealand's top 10 tear-jerking TV ads". NZ Herald. 16 August 2023. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  38. ^ "Switch off before you walk off". www.fireandemergency.nz. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  39. ^ "TV ad: Fire & Emergency New Zealand: 3 Minute Ad Takeover". Best Ads on TV. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  40. ^ "Fire and Emergency New Zealand: Escape Week • Ads of the World™ | Part of The Clio Network". Ads of the World™. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  41. ^ a b "Fire and Emergency New Zealand Archives". FCB New Zealand. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  42. ^ "3-Step-Escape Plan". Archived from the original on 22 January 2022. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  43. ^ Junkie, APAC Ad (14 December 2022). "Fire & Emergency New Zealand's Campaign – If You're Cooked, then Don't Cook". Branding in Asia Magazine. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  44. ^ "Seven Sharp Live House Burn | The Portal". portal.fireandemergency.nz. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  45. ^ "Watch: Seven Sharp burns down a house live on-air". One News. Archived from the original on 15 August 2023. Retrieved 16 August 2023.
  46. ^ "Fenz prepares to burn house down". NZ Herald. 16 August 2023. Retrieved 15 August 2023.
[edit]