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London Fire Commissioner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
London Fire Commissioner
AbbreviationLFC
PredecessorLondon Fire and Emergency Planning Authority
Formation1 April 2018
FounderGreater London Authority Act 1999
TypeFire authority
Legal statusFunctional body
PurposeMake key decisions on London Fire Brigade strategy, policy and budget
Region served
London
Parent organisation
Greater London Authority

The London Fire Commissioner (LFC) is a functional body of the Greater London Authority, with responsibility for the governance of the London Fire Brigade. It is a corporation sole and is the fire authority of Greater London.[1] It replaced the London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority on 1 April 2018.

History

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The London Fire Commissioner was created on 1 April 2018 as part of a nationwide reform of governance following the Policing and Crime Act 2017. It replaced the London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority.[2]

Governance

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The London Fire Commissioner is the body responsible for the governance of the London Fire Brigade. It is a incorporated as a corporation sole and is the fire and rescue authority for London. It is a functional body of the Greater London Authority. The Mayor of London is ultimately responsible for setting the organisation budget and approving the London Safety Plan. There is a Deputy Mayor for Fire and Resilience who acts on behalf of the mayor. All these structures are scrutinised by the Fire, Resilience and Emergency Planning Committee of the London Assembly.

References

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  1. ^ "Governance - London Fire Commissioner".
  2. ^ https://www.london-fire.gov.uk/media/2837/lfc-0001-d_md_lfc-governance-direction-2018_signed.pdf [bare URL PDF]