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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: Coastguard sacked for daring clifftop rescue of 13-year-old schoolgirl as boss says: 'We don't want dead heroes' Coastguard sacked for daring clifftop rescue of 13-year-old schoolgirl as boss says: 'We don't want dead heroes' By CHRIS BROOKE Last updated at 23:09pm on 11th January 2008 When coastguard Paul Waugh carried out a daring clifftop rescue to save a 13-year-old girl's life he was hailed as a hero and honoured with bravery awards. But bosses at the Maritime and Coastguard Agency were not so impressed with the lifesaver's actions because he ignored health and safety rules by not using safety equipment and following correct procedures. Far from heaping praise on the dedicated volunteer, Mr Waugh said he has been put under "immense pressure" from management and treated terribly. Now, a year after risking his own life to save the teenager, the 44-year-old has announced that he has been forced to quit the job after 13 years dedicated service. Mr Waugh, of Skelton Green, East Cleveland, said: "The way I have been treated is terrible. I loved that job and I am absolutely gutted that I am leaving. "A girl's life was in imminent danger and I did what I had to to save her life. Saving that girl was all that mattered, the cliff edge was crumbling and it was a 300 foot drop down. "But my bosses didn't see it that way - they said I should have waited for support and safety equipment. They criticised me and even said I was under investigation, but I didn't have time to wait for back up. "I never thought I could get into trouble for just doing my job and what I thought was right. I couldn't have lived with myself if I had waited any longer and she had fallen to her death." Mr Waugh, who has also won an award for his selfless charity fundraising work, added: "I thought I would be a coastguard for life, but I couldn't carry on being treated so badly. "I loved doing it but now I have a bitter taste about it all." The decision has caused outrage in a coastal community where Mr Waugh is regarded as a true hero. But the coastguard has defended its hard-line attitude towards the volunteer lifesaver with the comment that they are "not looking for dead heroes". The incident happened on 14 January last year when schoolgirl Faye Harrison, 13, and three friends were out walking and clambered down cliffs to get to the beach. They found themselves trapped as darkness set in and Faye tried to climb back up to get help. She became trapped on a cliff ledge which began to crumble and was left clinging for her life, holding on to tufts of grass. The other girls managed to alert a fisherman who dialled 999 and the Skinningrove coastguard team were despatched to the scene. Realising the urgency of the situation, Mr Waugh inched his way down to Faye without using ropes or a harness. By the time he reached her, she had been stranded for 45 minutes and had been mentally planning her own funeral. He put his arms around her to reassure her she would not fall and after a further 30 minutes the teenager was winched to safety by a rescue helicopter. Ironically, it was the second time Mr Waugh had saved Faye. The year before she became trapped by the tide while out with her cousins on a beach. The schoolgirl of Saltburn-by-the-Sea, now 14, has been left furious about Mr Waugh's plight. She said: "I am disgusted by the way Paul has been treated. If he hadn't been brave enough to climb down to me I don't think I would be here today. Paul is a hero." Mr Waugh, who is married to Sue, 40, and has three children, Laura, 17, Sally, 16, and Rosie, eight, was named Hero of the Year after the daring rescue, won a Vodafone lifesaver award and was nominated for another award run by a national newspaper. He is also a carer for his wife who has a neurological disease. A spokesman for the coastguard agency said: "We wish Paul well in his future endeavours and the MCA is very grateful for his past activities and work in the Coastguard Rescue Service. "However, the MCA is very mindful of health and safety regulations which are in place for very good reasons. "Above all our responsibility is to maintain the health and welfare of those who we sometimes ask to go out in difficult and challenging conditions to effect rescues. "The MCA is not looking for dead heroes. As such, we ask our volunteers to risk assess the situations they and the injured or distressed person find themselves in, and to ensure that whatever action they take does not put anyone in further danger. "We are proud of our safety record and we will seek to maintain the safety of our volunteers, and minimise risk in what can be inherently difficult situations."
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#3. To: aristeides (#0)
Jim Flynn is a hero of mine. He was the sitter in the Eugene, Oregon Tree Riot who resisted being drenched in pepper spray, having his clothing slit from armpit to crotch to insure the chemical had devastating access to his sensitive spots, resisted "Dutch ribbing," hair pulling, and other pain compliance measures to stay rock solid to the tree he hung onto for dear life. On that day, a crowd of Eugeneans took exception to the death of forty large street trees in Down Town Eugene. He was high aloft, and they accessed him with a Eugene Fire Department cherry picker. As a reflex reaction to expecting a blast of pepper spray to his second leg having the pants slit to the crotch, and with his eyes welded shut in pain and tears he leaped from one lateral trunk to another solely with the faith he was remembering where it was. He only gave up when in backing up with a cable around his waist he could feel himself start to black out. He could of died in a fall of his own that day, in a fall 60-70 feet to the pavement below. No agent of the city endangering his life ever lost his job or status for his or her role in this exercise in enforcing corporate fascism. Jim was also never chided as reckless for his instinctive reaction to pepper spray applied to his crotch from another angle either for that matter. My point is, when a hero like this does what he has to do, he is punished and scolded like a child. But if a power elite person makes the wrong call and turns a tree removal into the biggest story of 1997 in Oregon's second largest city, they don't get sanctioned or lose status for their boneheadness. Why am I not surprised? I have no respect for this decision involving this man and see a double standard to it. I'm also sure had he been a Secret Serviceman like Tim McCarthy and had taken a bullet for a Reagan or a Bush he would be lauded too. Guess the lives of us human cattle not of the club mean far less then those who are made into the clique of rich and powerful people who run things in the world.
I think you nailed it Mike...it is OK to die for Bush or Cheney, and especially for their wallets, but you are screwed if you risk your life for a nobody.
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