On Air Now Nick Osborne 10:00am - 3:00pm Sigala / Ella Eyre - Came Here For Love Schedule

More Beach Lifeguards To Be Recruited In Brighton & Hove

More beach lifeguards are to be recruited for the summer season, reversing a cut in Brighton and Hove City Council’s annual budget.

Councillors are being asked to back spending more than £93,000 to pay for the extra lifeguards to provide cover at more Brighton and Hove beaches.

The proposal is due to be discussed by the council’s Culture, Heritage, Sport, Tourism and Economic Development Committee on Thursday (15 June) although the cost is currently unbudgeted.

The lifeguard service was affected by a £100,000 cut during the council’s annual budget-setting process in February despite public opposition to the plans.

The Greens and Conservatives agreed to the reduced service on four beaches from May through to September, with cover on an additional three beaches over the summer holidays.

Now Labour is in control, the party wants to fund an extra 15 seasonal lifeguards to extend the service to all of the beaches that had lifeguards last summer.

During the budget-setting process, Labour councillors negotiated a reallocation of £60,000 from funding set aside for diseased tree removal to pay for more lifeguards.

But when the old Tourism, Equalities, Communities and Culture Committee met in March, councillors were told that about half the money – or £30,000 – would fund safety information on beaches rather a restored lifeguard service. The rest would go towards the Visit Brighton tourism service and Volk’s Railway.

At the time, Labour councillor Alan Robins, who now chairs the new Culture, Heritage, Sport, Tourism and Economic Development Committee, said:

“I don’t want to be trying to handle the communications or anything else when someone has got into trouble on a beach where we’ve taken away the lifeguards.

“It’s not only the immediate danger that people are in – in the sea. It’s the advice and the untold lives that could be saved by people saying: ‘Don’t go in there now. It’s too rough.’ (That’s) advice which won’t be given because there isn’t anyone there.”

If councillors back the proposal, the £60,000 would cover part of the £153,000 cost of the extra lifeguards leaving the council to find the remaining £93,000.

The council said that it had carried out risk assessments based on visitor numbers. As a result, the beaches at West Street, to the east and west of the Palace Pier and by the King Alfred were monitored by lifeguards from Saturday 27 May to Sunday 3 September.

From Saturday 22 July to Sunday 3 September, funding is already in place for lifeguards in Saltdean, by the West Pier and by Hove Lawns.

Beaches without lifeguards for the 2023 season included Rottingdean, Duke’s Mound/Black Rock and West Hove/the Lagoon. These would be prioritised, according to a report.

It said:

“If incidents occur on beaches without lifeguards, a member of the lifeguard team will respond if it is practical to do so and does not reduce the levels of safe cover on lifeguarded beaches.

“Other responders, including the patrol boat, seafront co-ordinators, and/or seafront officers, as well as partner emergency service agencies, may be called on to deal with the incident.

“To facilitate a prompt and efficient response, rescue equipment is stored in containers located on non-lifeguarded beaches, should the need to respond arise.

“To extend the current service during the busiest part of the season and cover all previously lifeguarded beaches (10 in total), an additional 15 lifeguards are required on duty each day.

“This includes provision for additional lifeguards at existing stations to provide greater levels of contingency cover in instances where staffing levels are depleted, eg, because of absence, major incidents or other extreme circumstances.”

The Culture, Heritage, Sport, Tourism and Economic Development Committee is due to meet at Hove Town Hall at 4pm on Thursday 15 June. The meeting is scheduled to be webcast on the council’s website.

More from Sussex News

Your News

It’s easy to get in touch with the More Radio News team.

Add you phone number if you would like us to call you back