Volunteers from the Lake District's mountain rescue teams gathered to kick-start a safety campaign to reduce the number of callouts. The teams in the area ...
AdventureSmart is supported by more than 100 organisations in the outdoor recreation and tourism section. Its aim is to reduce the number of avoidable incidents which the rescue and emergency services deal with each year by establishing a comprehensive set of safety messages and to work with the outdoor sector to promote them. Volunteers from the Lake District’s mountain rescue teams gathered to kick-start a safety campaign to reduce the number of callouts.
Mystery today announced Mystery Insights, a software tool to analyze employee interactions, share visibility into workforce connectedness, and recomme.
Mystery is the employee experience platform that ties morale to an organization’s bottom line. Mystery Insights helps leaders target budgets on the activities most likely to drive positive change, and Insights measures the impact of their morale spending. Experiences and Insights work in conjunction, each making the other more impactful. “People leaders are tired of receiving employee engagement surveys without actionable data,” said Shane Kovalsky, CEO of Mystery. “Work changed radically over the past few years, and employee engagement tools must adapt as well,” said Sarah Guo, General Partner at Conviction. Insights empowers people leaders with data-driven strategies that counteract employee isolation and boost connectedness by 45%.
A team of firefighters were given training in rescuing people from buildings in a visit this week.
An undisclosed number of the ambulances were shipped across Europe to Ukraine in Spring. He said: “I first went to Ukraine in 2016 on a scoping mission and with support from the Service, fire engines were donated in 2018 and converted to lefthand drive before being used operationally. “To support the UKRO’s International Development Programme, I returned in 2019 and 2020 to provide further training. The team donated four fire engines to help, one of which was used in a deadly missile attack on the Amstor shopping mall in Kremenchuk, central Ukraine, on June 27. He added: "You’ll maybe recall the footage of the appalling Russian missile attack on a shopping mall that one of our [fire engines] was seen at. As well as its fire engines, the team has been loaning out rescue equipment and fire kits. One factory in Goole has been converting former Army vehicles The fire service's chief has described how his team felt 'humbled' by the Ukrainians' positivity as they were shown the ropes this week. HFRS Station Manager Ian Marritt, is Director of Education and Development at UKRO. "We’re giving them more extrication training before they compete at [the UKRO Rescue Festival]," Chris tweeted. Some of the brave teams on the ground during the attack were here in the region this week as part of the United Kingdom Rescue Organisation's (UKRO) 'Rescue Challenge', which HRFS has been supporting for a number of years. [Humberside Fire & Rescue](https://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/all-about/humberside-fire-rescue-service) has welcome a team from the war-hit country, with the fire fighters undergoing training in trauma care and extrication (removing people from vehicles and buildings).