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Inverness
Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Water Safety Action Plan

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New safety measures introduced to protect the public.

Extra funding, improved signs and lesson plans for pupils are all part of a new Water Safety Action Plan.

The plan has been drawn up by the Scottish Government and a range of key organisations following a number of tragic water deaths.

Partners on the Water Safety Stakeholder Group have committed to further develop partnership working to help prevent drownings and agreed a range of key actions including:

new water safety promotions targeted at areas with a higher risk of drowning, improved signage at popular locations including lochs and reservoirs and a risk assessment of beaches

additional funding of £60,000 for Water Safety Scotland to develop its co-ordination role for all organisations with an interest in water safety

roll-out of a drowning incident review scheme to ensure lessons are learned from all fatal and non-fatal incidents

lesson plans on water safety for pupils

continued development of the National Learn to Swim Framework delivered with local authorities

Scotland’s Water Safety Code developed to ensure consistency of public messages on key issues including hidden hazards and cold-water shock

training for businesses and the public on how to use rescue equipment and review of 999 procedures

Community Safety Minister Ash Regan – who chaired the stakeholder group – said:  

“The Scottish Government takes water safety very seriously and this Action Plan includes a range of key steps agreed with our partners to further mitigate the risks from Scotland’s coastal and inland waters.

“Scotland’s beaches, rivers, reservoirs and lochs are amongst our finest natural resources, but beautiful as they are they can be a source of lethal danger and we continue to see the tragic consequences of that.

“The actions in the plan are targeted at creating a safer environment in Scotland.

“But whether it’s sailing, swimming, diving or fishing, anyone undertaking recreational activities in and around water must be fully aware of the risks and take every possible precaution.”

Chair of Water Safety Scotland Michael Avril said:

“We would like to thank the Minister for taking a proactive approach to the prevention of drownings in Scotland.

“The release of this Action Plan – created in partnership with member organisations – compliments Scotland’s Drowning Prevention Strategy.

“Today, we have published the Interim Review of the strategy and we are hopeful this, combined with the Action Plan and increased collaboration from partners, will help Scotland meet its key targets to reduce accidental drowning fatalities by 50 per cent by 2026 and contribute to reduction of water-related suicide.”

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