Fire Safety and Risk Management
University of Central Lancashire
BSc (Hons) · 4 Years · Full-time with year in industry · Preston · 23/09/2024
Tariff points: 104/104
New workers start around £23,606. Normal pay is £37,028 per year.
Highly experienced workers can earn up to £47,424.
In the past year there were 42,262 vacancies for this type of job
Projected job growth over the next 8 years
People work towards these careers by taking these courses at college and uni.
Supervises a watch.
Advises on fire safety measures in new buildings.
Attends and deals with bomb alerts and accidents involving spillage of hazardous substances.
Removes goods from fire damaged premises, clears excess water, makes safe any structural hazards and takes any other necessary steps to reduce damage to property.
Rescues people or animals trapped by fire or other emergency situations such as flooding and administers first aid.
Operates hose pipes, ladders, chemical, foam, gas or powder fire extinguishing appliances.
Travels to fire or other emergency by vehicle and locates water mains if necessary.
Arranges fire drills and tests alarm systems and equipment.
Inspects premises to identify potential fire hazards and to check that firefighting equipment is available and in working order and that statutory fire safety regulations are met.
Hard skills are specific, learnable, measurable, often industry or occupation-specific abilities related to a position.
Skills are ranked based on the number of job adverts that list them as required skills.
Soft skills can be self-taught and usually do not necessitate a certain completed level of education.
Skills are ranked based on the number of job adverts that list them as required skills.