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New fire service training centre opens in Cookstown
New fire service training centre opens in Cookstown

BBC News

time28-05-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

New fire service training centre opens in Cookstown

A long-delayed state-of-the-art training college for the fire service in Northern Ireland is to officially open at a ceremony on facility just outside Cookstown was first announced more than 20 years initial plan was for a larger training college that included the police and prison in 2015 plans for the college were radically redrawn and in 2021 planning permission was granted for a £42m facility that catered for the Northern Ireland Fire & Rescue Service (NIFRS) only. Both the prison service and the police were instead given extra money for training and to refurbish existing facilities. 'Tactical firefighting facility' The Northern Ireland Fire & Rescue Service Learning & Development College (LDC) at Desertcreat includes a flood water rescue facility, a call-out village, a training warehouse, a barn and slurry pit and a tactical firefighting facility. An official opening ceremony for the college is taking place on Wednesday includes firefighter demonstrations at various locations across the say the facilities will enable firefighters to simulate real-life training scenarios and provide a "safe, controlled and repeatable environment for high-quality, practical training".The site was granted planning approval by Mid Ulster District Council in represented the largest capital investment in NIFRS' history. Delays Proposals for the site at Desertcreat have been dogged by problems since the Policing Board announced in February 2004 that a £80m police training college for Northern Ireland would be built planning permission was granted in 2005 for a state-of-the art college, it was later reported the same year that the new academy would cost £50m more than expected and would not be completed until February 2007, the government announced it planned to provide all the funding for a new joint police, fire and prison service college at the 210-acre permission was granted for the training centre in 2013, but in November 2014 a steering group overseeing the development said the project should not scheme was subsequently scrapped and it later emerged that Northern Ireland had lost £53m of public money that had been earmarked for the joint training college, with a Stormont committee being told the Treasury had withdrawn the for the college were radically was announced the fire and rescue service would get a £44m purpose-built complex at Desertcreat, while the PSNI would be given about £20m to refurbish its existing training facilities in east prison service instead received funding for training at Maghaberry and Magilligan prisons.

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