Tuesday, August 23, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 179 Sizewell Firefighting

SUFFOLK FIRE SERVICE

From: L/Ff Brown 631
Station: Normanshurst

To: SubO Wigglesworth

Date: 17.05.99

REF: L/Ff Hyde

I am happy to confirm that I had told Ff Hyde to use my fire helmet during his period of temporary promotion.

Also by the time Ff Hyde was temporary promoted it was I think obvious to all concerned that this was to be a lengthy period, at the time I didn’t feel that it would be as long as it has been, but I felt it was not going to be a quick return to work for me.

As far as I am aware this was conveyed to the management.

LF/F Brown. 631.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 178 Sizewell Fire Team



Suffolk County Council
Fire Service

A Wigglesworth Esq
c/o Lowestoft Fire Station
Lowestoft
NR32 2QA

PER/SD/KMD
Miss S. Davies
(01473) 588872
14th May 1999
Dear Mr Wigglesworth,
Fire Services (Discipline) Regulations, 1985
Mr. M. Hyde

Thank you for your letter dated 12th May, 1999. I note the list of witnesses you would like to call at the discipline hearing concerning Mr. Hyde.
The arrangements for calling of witnesses at disciplinary hearings are set out in the Guidance Notes to the Discipline Regulations (see Annex C para 3 and Annex D para 7). In particular, paragraph 7 of Annex D makes clear that the subject of the hearing may give names of witnesses of relevant facts in order that these people may be called to give evidence at the hearing.
It appears to me that your list of proposed witnesses is stretching the definition of "witnesses of relevant facts" a little far.
I have asked a member of my department to proceed with arrangements for the hearing and you and Mr. Hyde will be notified of the date as soon as possible. However, unless within 7 days of the date of this letter you are able to offer some clear justification as to the relevant facts witnessed by the first four people named on your list (i.e. Mr. M. Alcock, Mr. S. smith, Mr K. Seager and Mr. C. Hodge), I will not be notifying these people of their required attendance at the hearing. Witnesses 5- 12 will, however, be ordered to attend. Rest assured that you will be given ample opportunity at the hearing to state your case, on Mr. Hyde’s behalf, and. If it becomes apparent that any or all of the four people referred to above are essential to that case, the presiding officer has the authority to adjourn the hearing.

Yours sincerely

Sarah Davies (now Meelan)
Personnel Manager

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 177 Lowestoft Fire Risk Plans

Suffolk County Council

Fire Service
A Wigglesworth Esq
Lowestoft Fire Station
Lowestoft
NR32 2QA

KES/DISC/Hyde
ACFO Seager
(01473) 588939
13th May 1999
By Recorded Delivery

Dear Mr Wigglesworth,

Fire Services (Discipline) Regulations, 1985

Thank you for your further letter and enclosure dated 12th May 1999.
I feel I must make my position absolutely clear. Having said in my letter of 21 April that I would not enter into any further correspondence with you prior to the hearing of the charge against Mr. Hyde, I find myself compelled out of necessity to write in response to your tactic of sending me so-called "case evidence" in sealed envelopes marked for the attention of the presiding officer.
Until now, I have been content to refer these envelopes to the Finance Officer for safekeeping in the safe at Headquarters until the day of the hearing itself (yet to be arranged for reasons I will refer to later). My intention was that on the day of the hearing itself, these envelopes would be returned to you unopened, for you to open them in the presence of the presiding officer and present the evidence therein in Mr. Hyde’s defence in the normal way. However, I am mystified by this most recent envelope, marked with an encircled 3 and dated 10 May 1999, which you indicate in your covering letter requires "immediate attention"
My dilemma is this. The guidance to the Regulations makes it clear that there should have been no opportunity in advance of the hearing for the disciplinary body (i.e. the presiding officer in this case) to have conferred with either party. Considerable effort is devoted to ensuring that the presiding officer comes to the hearing unfettered by prior knowledge of the particular events surrounding the charge, so that his judgement can be based solely on the evidence which is presented at the hearing itself. You have enough knowledge of the legal system to know that this is perfectly proper. In that case then, how can it be that case evidence ( your words) is considered by the presiding officer in advance of the hearing, as the words "requires immediate attention" in your covering letter dictate? Such an action would, in my view, render the presiding officer incapable of hearing the case thereafter on the grounds that he had been tainted by prior knowledge. I am simply at a loss to understand the purpose of submitting evidence in this manner.
For the sake of absolute clarity, the issue of whom Mr. Hyde will call as a witness in his defence is an entirely separate matter. It is essential that Miss Davies is told, without further delay, whom Mr. Hyde intends to call in order that she can make the necessary arrangements for the hearing. I reiterate again: it is not in Mr. Hyde’s interests to delay proceedings any longer than necessary. I believe a reasonable period of time has been given for him (or you) to advise Miss davies of his witnesses. I have written to him to advise him that this information is required within the next 7 days, otherwise I shall have to consider making arrangements for a hearing notwithstanding. If any of these envelopes contains this information, then that is NOT a matter for the presiding officer, but for her as the clerk to the hearing. With this single exception, all other matters to do with Mr Hyde’s defence must be properly put by him, or his representative, before the presiding officer within the hearing itself and certainly not beforehand.
Quite why this case has departed from the established practices of the past is beyond me. Ordinarily, once a charge sheet has been properly issued, and once the documents on which the brigade’s case is based have been made available to the accused, my part in proceedings is done, and the case is passed to the Personnel Manager for the necessary arrangements to be made. All evidence for the defence, whether based on fact or process, has then been presented at the hearing, and the presiding officer has weighed this evidence, together with all other evidence presented, when determining his judgement.
I can see no legitimate reason why this case should be dealt with in any other way than that I have just described. For this reason, I am returning your envelopes unopened, and I would ask you to desist from forwarding further documents 9other than details of Mr. Hyde’s witnesses) hereafter.
Yours sincerely

K. E. Seager,
Assistant Chief Fire Officer (Technical)
Brigade Investigating Officer
Enc

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 176 Sizewell Fire Risk Plans


Suffolk County Council

County Personnel Department
C Jones Esq.,
Thompsons
Solicitors
Congress House
Gt Russell Street
LONDON WC1B 3LW

S:\app\griev\jones let 12-doc Mr D J Morgan
(01473) 584102
13th May 1999

Dear Mr Jones
GRIEVANCE – FIREFIGHTER M HYDE
I refer to your letter of the 22 April to the Chief executive a copy of which was passed to me on 7 May.
I have now received confirmation from the Chief Fire Officer of his acceptance that the grievance should proceed to the next stage which, in Suffolk is an Elected Members Panel drawn from the County Council’s Personnel Sub committee.
Accordingly, I am making arrangements to convene such a Panel which, in the normal course, will be held here at County Hall. On the assumption that you will continue to represent Firefighter Hyde my colleague, Lizzie Reynolds, will be contacting you and the other relevant parties to agree a date for the hearing.
In this respect please be good enough to let me have a Statement of Grievance which, together with the Chief fire Officer’s statement of reply, will be incorporated with a case file to be circulated to all relevant parties.
Copies of this letter go to the Chief Fire Officer and to Firefighter Hyde.
Yours sincerely

David Morgan
Employee Relations Manager

Saturday, August 20, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 175 Suffolk Fire Risk Plans

Suffolk County Council

County Personnel Department

Firefighter M Hyde

S:\app\griev\hyde let 12-doc Mr D J Morgan
(01473) 584102
13th May 1999

Dear Mr Hyde

GRIEVANCE TO ELECTED MEMBERS

Please find enclosed copy of my letter to Thompsons, Solicitors.
Yours sincerely

David Morgan
Employee Relations Manager

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 174 FSYTA Suffolk


The Fire Brigades Union
No. 10 Region

Reply to:

From. SubO A. Wigglesworth
To. LFf Paul Brown
Date 13th May 1999

REF. DISCIPLINE CASE Ff M HYDE (Conduct Prejudicial to Discipline)
As you no doubt know Ff M Hyde was charged with the above offence 13th April 1999.

I understand that when LFf Hyde assumed the role of T/LFf to cover for your sickness, in September 1998, that you lent your Fire Helmet and obviated the need for him to attach rank markings.
I am also interested in your version of the circumstances that appertained in relation to the extent and, length of sickness that you expressed verbally or, otherwise to the then Station Commander when the decision to promote Ff M Hyde was made. The latter was effected 25.09.1999. This is I believe some time after you originally booked sick.
I would be extremely grateful if you could consider the points raised in two paragraphs above and make comment on the facts relevant to both situations, in the form of a statement. If there is any other factual information you feel may be relevant to the discipline case, please include it in your statement.
I remind you that your response may ultimately be used in Ff Hyde’s Discipline Hearing. As such it is important that your statement should be as accurate and true to the best of your knowledge.
Please ensure your completed statement is returned to me as soon as possible. In anticipation I thank you for your assistance.
Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 173 FSYTA Haverhill


Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA

Tel 01502 403842
13th May 1999

Dear Presiding officer,

Ff M HYDE – CONDUCT PREJUDICIAL TO DISCIPLINE.

"which offence is committed where a member of the Fire Brigade WHILE ON DUTY or IN UNIFORM acts in a manner which is, or likely to be prejudicial to the discipline of the Brigade."

On the instructions of the brigade Investigating Officer who has notified an unwillingness to accept further correspondence I present you with a statement that is relevant to the case. This is from Ff I Pettit and dated 12-05-99.

This will allow you to pursue further investigations if you so wish.

Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, GIFireE.
Attached: Statement Ff I Pettit (see Doc 162)

The Suffolk hyde Affair - Doc 172 FSYTA Newmarket



Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA
Tel 01502 403842
13th May 1999


Dear ACFO Seager,

I assume your position, as notified 21st April remains current.

Please pass the enclosure herein to the presiding officer. It remains immediate attention.

Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, GIFireE.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 171 FSYTA Bury St Edmunds


Suffolk County Council

Fire Service
A Wigglesworth Esq
Lowestoft Fire Station
Lowestoft
NR32 2QA

KES/DISC/Hyde
ACFO Seager
(01473) 588939
13th May 1999
Dear Mr Wigglesworth,
Fire Services (Discipline) Regulations, 1985

Thank you for your letter dated 11th May 1999.

As soon as I have details of the witnesses Mr Hyde intends to call in his defence, I shall respond in full to your queries.
In the event that I do not have a response from Mr Hyde to my letter of the 10th May by Wednesday 19th May, I shall ask Miss Davies to make arrangements for the hearing notwithstanding and will provide the necessary minimum period of notice specified in the guidance to the Regulations.
Yours sincerely

K. E. Seager,
Assistant Chief Fire Officer (Technical)
Brigade Investigating Officer

Friday, August 19, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 170 Ken Seager Sproughton

From: FF M. GILBERT

To: SUBO A WIGGLESWORTH

Date: 13.05.99

REF: DISCIPLINE CASE. FF M. HYDE

During the period 2nd – 5th February 1999 I was in fact on duty with Blue Watch , when the alleged offence took place.

At no time was I aware that FF Hyde acted in a way that could be construed as behaviour that was or likely to be prejudicial to discipline.

This statement is accurate to the best of my knowledge and is forwarded for your attention.
M. Gilbert

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 169 Martlesham Fire Station


Re Service of Doc 168

By way of earlier correspondence ACFO Kenneth Seager (21st April 1999 – Doc 130) had indicated that he did not wish to enter into further correspondence or assist defence team.

‘So far as I am concerned, this is my final reply to the issues you raise. I will not enter into any further correspondence in the matter prior to hearing. Any further concerns you may have will, I am afraid, have to be put before the presiding officer at the hearing in order for him to determine what weight to attach to them’. Kenneth Seager 1999

In consequence, it was necessary for the defence to direct enquiries and material evidence to the Presiding Officer as nominated by ACFO Kenneth Seager.

Doc 168 was attached to the Doc 167 sent to ACFO Ken Seager.
The envelope conveying the attachment was addressed:
Top left corner.
Strictly Private and Confidential
Middle
Case evidence submitted 12. May. 1999.
F.A.O. Presiding Officer.
Discipline Case Ff M Hyde.
Bottom right corner.
#4

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 168 Ipswich Firefighter

Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA
Tel 01502 403842

12th May 1999

Dear Presiding officer,

I refer to my letter to you dated 10th May 1999.

Reviewing the contents I note I have made two mistakes.

I have spelt FF Hydes name incorrectly in the 5th paragraph.
My reference to Note for case should in fact be NOTE FOR FILE.
I apologise for burdening you with further correspondence, however I believe there is an important distinction at stake for point two above. In particular, I do not wish to be seen as attempting to mislead the tribunal.

Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, GIFireE.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 167 North Wales Fire Service

Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA
Tel 01502 403842

12th May 1999

Dear ACFO Seager,

I assume your position, as notified 21st April remains current.
Please pass the enclosure herein to the presiding officer. It remains immediate attention.

Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, GIFireE.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 166 Sigi Schwabe

Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA

Tel 01502 403842

12th May 1999

Dear Miss Davies,

A.C.F.O. Seager has instructed me directly to forward you a list of witnesses that Ff M Hyde intends to call at his prosecution hearing.

These are. Or are likely to be:
CFO M. Alcock
DCFO SA. Smith
ACFO K. Seager
DO C. Hodge
LFf P. Brown
Ff S. Wood
Ff I. Pettit
Ff M. Gilbert
T/ADO G. Saward
SubO J. Tiffen
ADO A. Campion
ADO E. Smith
Bearing in mind four of the above are also listed for the prosecution I am sure you will agree the list is a reasonable number.

As expressly prescribed in the Fire Service (Discipline) Regulations I ask you to write to the above named and inform them that they may be approached by Ff M Hyde or myself with a view to being interviewed prior to the hearing. This is not necessary for Ff Wood, Pettit, Gilbert or LFf Brown who have already assisted.

Having complied with the request for witnesses I would be grateful if you can without delay provide a date for the hearing. If not please can you explain why you are unable to do so.

Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, GIFireE.

Tuesday, August 16, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 165 Sigi Winters Ipswich

Spare

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 164 Birmingham City Chief Executive Lin Homer



Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA
Tel 01502 403842

12th May 1999

Dear ACFO Seager,
I refer to your letter dated 27th April 1999 (Doc 143).
Notwithstanding, your desire not to indulge in correspondence, notified 21st April 1999, you raise issues that require a response. The latter may seem delayed. This is on account of the confusion as to exactly what your position is?
Firstly, we are grateful for your offer to copy in Mr Jones with any correspondence relating to matters concerning the discipline proceedings. We accept that offer. We have told Mr Jones that he will hear from you from time to Time.
Secondly, I am concerned that this matter may be heard by the CFO. The CFO already has prior knowledge of this matter and is inextricably personally involved. It is a matter of fact that the CFO is the respondent in HYDE v ALCOCK LO9000306. The associated summons was also addressed to and served upon Mr Alcock. Liability has been admitted.
To this may I add the discipline proceedings against Ff Hyde have been the subject of discussion between the CFO and County Chief Executive. This is noted in the latters letters to Ff Hyde dated 8th April 1999. With these points in mind Ff Hyde reserves the right to call the CFO as a witness. Indeed, it would be bizarre in the extreme for the CFO to be called forward as a witness and judge his own response!
The above being so, I do not think that the CFO can fairly and independently hear this case under the provisions of the Fire Service (Discipline) regulations 1985. In the past, such circumstances have always led to the Disciplinary tribunal of the Fire Authority hearing the case under regulation 9 (2) (b), instead of the CFO.
Will you please consider this and confirm whether you are prepared to arrange for this matter to be dealt with by the Disciplinary Tribunal of the Fire Authority. If you are not, can you explain why?
Finally with regard to orders and service of documents, Ff Hyde is happy to accept both of these personally while on duty in the presence of his representative SubO A Wigglesworth.

Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, GIFireE.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 163 Clifton Road Fire Station

Date: 12/05/99

REF: DISCIPLINE CASE. M. Hyde (FIRE FIGHTER)

Sub O Wigglesworth

I can confirm I was on duty on 2nd – 5th February 1999 when the offence allegedly occurred.

I can also confirm I witnessed nothing which may be construed to be prejudicial to discipline committed by FF M. Hyde.

Forwarded for your attention and necessary action

S.D. Wood FF

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 162 Community Safety in Suffolk


Blue Watch
Normanshurst Fire station
Lowestoft

SubO A Wigglesworth
Chairman
Lowestoft Branch
The Fire brigades Union

12.05.99

Dear SubO Wigglesworth,
Ref. Discipline Case Ff M Hyde (Conduct Prejudicial to Discipline)
Thank you for your letter dated 10 May 1999.

With reference to the above and in response to your questions:
I was on day duty on the 2nd and 3rd February 1999 and on night duty on the 4th and 5th February 1999.
I did not witness any act that might be construed to be prejudicial to discipline committed by Ff M Hyde.
SubO J. Tiffen, Watch Commander Blue watch, Fire station, Normanshurst, informed me, during the night duty of the 4th February 1999, that Ff M Hyde had been ordered to remove his "Rank Bars" which Ff M Hyde had done, but after consulting a Fire Brigade’s Union Official (Chris Hayward) Ff Hyde had reinstated his "Rank Bars"
Yours faithfully
Ian D. Pettit
Firefighter, Suffolk Fire Service.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 161 Suffolk Fire and Rescue Service Jobs

Michael Hyde
Lowestoft

Facsimile Transmission Covering Letter

To: NAME Tony Wigglesworth
COMPANY FBU Chairman Lowestoft Branch
FAX NO. 01502 575610


FROM: NAME Mick Hyde
DATE 12th May 1999
FAX NO. 01502 ******

Instructions

Dear Tony

Received this today by recorded delivery(Doc 160).

Regards Mick.
Full copy of Doc 160 attached.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 160 Lowestoft Fire Consultants


Suffolk County Council
Fire Service
M Hyde Esq
Lowestoft

KES/DISC/Hyde
ACFO Seager
(01473) 588939
10th May 1999

Dear Mr Hyde,
Fire Services (Discipline) Regulations, 1985
I write further in relation to the disciplinary hearing which will be convened to hear the charge against you.
I am still awaiting details of the witnesses you intend to call in your defence. I have asked the Personnel Manager to make arrangements for the hearing, but she is unable to progress the matter at the moment because she does not know whom to order to attend on your behalf.

Whilst I initially indicated my preparedness to await such notification from you, I believe that a reasonable period of time has now elapsed. I should point out that the guidance notes to the Fire Services (Discipline) Regulations, 1985 permit a hearing to be arranged without the accused’s consent, subject to sufficient notice of a date, time and venue being given. I would not want to do this, however, unless I felt I had no alternative.
Please let me have the names of the witnesses you intend to call within 7 days of the date of this letter in order that the hearing can be convened without further delay. If this causes you genuine difficulty, please let me know as soon as possible.

I have copied this letter to Mr Craig Jones of Thompsons, and I enclose a further copy for you to pass to your union representative, Mr Wigglesworth.


Yours sincerely

K. E. Seager,
Assistant Chief Fire Officer (Technical)
Brigade Investigating Officer
Enc. Letter for Union representative

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 159 East Midlands Fire and Rescue Control Centre


The Fire Brigades Union
No. 10 Region
Reply to:
From. SubO A. Wigglesworth
To. Ff Mark Gilbert
Date 10th May 1999

REF. DISCIPLINE CASE Ff M HYDE (Conduct Prejudicial to Discipline)

As you no doubt know Ff M Hyde was charged with the above offence 13th April 1999.

I understand you were on duty when the offence is alleged. If you recall it was the same week as the Hippodrome incident, between 2nd – 5th February 1999. I ask you to recollect your thoughts and itemise any event or actions by Ff M Hyde which you believe were or were likely to be prejudicial to discipline between those dates, in the form of a statement.

Most specifically I ask that your statement confirms:
Whether you were in fact on duty on the relevant dates.
Did you witness any act that might be construed to be prejudicial to discipline committed by Ff Hyde.
Any other information that you think may be relevant.
Your response may ultimately be used in Ff Hyde’s discipline hearing and as such it is important that your statement should be accurate and true to the best of your knowledge.
Please ensure your completed statement is returned to me as soon as possible. In anticipation I thank you for your assistance.
Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth

Sunday, August 14, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 158 West Midlands Fire and Rescue Control Centre

The Fire Brigades Union
No. 10 Region
Reply to:

From. SubO A. Wigglesworth

To. Ff Simon Wood

Date 10th May 1999

REF. DISCIPLINE CASE Ff M HYDE (Conduct Prejudicial to Discipline)

As you no doubt know Ff M Hyde was charged with the above offence 13th April 1999.

I understand you were on duty when the offence is alleged. If you recall it was the same week as the Hippodrome incident, between 2nd – 5th February 1999. I ask you to recollect your thoughts and itemise any event or actions by Ff M Hyde which you believe were or were likely to be prejudicial to discipline between those dates, in the form of a statement.
Most specifically I ask that your statement confirms:
Whether you were in fact on duty on the relevant dates.
Did you witness any act that might be construed to be prejudicial to discipline committed by Ff Hyde.
Any other information that you think may be relevant.
Your response may ultimately be used in Ff Hyde’s discipline hearing and as such it is important that your statement should be accurate and true to the best of your knowledge.
Please ensure your completed statement is returned to me as soon as possible. In anticipation I thank you for your assistance.
Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 157 Matt Hassey Suffolk FBU


The Fire Brigades Union
No. 10 Region
Reply to:
From. SubO A. Wigglesworth
To. Ff Ian Pettitt
Date 10th May 1999

REF. DISCIPLINE CASE Ff M HYDE (Conduct Prejudicial to Discipline)
As you no doubt know Ff M Hyde was charged with the above offence 13th April 1999.
I understand you were on duty when the offence is alleged. If you recall it was the same week as the Hippodrome incident, between 2nd – 5th February 1999. I ask you to recollect your thoughts and itemise any event or actions by Ff M Hyde which you believe were or were likely to be prejudicial to discipline between those dates, in the form of a statement.

Most specifically I ask that your statement confirms:
Whether you were in fact on duty on the relevant dates.
Did you witness any act that might be construed to be prejudicial to discipline committed by Ff Hyde.
Any other information that you think may be relevant.
Your response may ultimately be used in Ff Hyde’s discipline hearing and as such it is important that your statement should be accurate and true to the best of your knowledge.
Please ensure your completed statement is returned to me as soon as possible. In anticipation I thank you for your assistance.
Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth

The suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 156 Dave Collins Suffolk FBU



Re Service of Doc 155

By way of earlier correspondence ACFO Kenneth Seager (21st April 1999 – Doc 130) had indicated that he did not wish to enter into further correspondence or assist defence team.

‘So far as I am concerned, this is my final reply to the issues you raise. I will not enter into any further correspondence in the matter prior to hearing. Any further concerns you may have will, I am afraid, have to be put before the presiding officer at the hearing in order for him to determine what weight to attach to them’. Kenneth Seager 1999
In consequence, it was necessary for the defence to direct enquiries and material evidence to the Presiding Officer as nominated by ACFO Kenneth Seager.
Doc 155 was attached to the Doc 154 sent to ACFO Ken Seager.
The envelope conveying the attachment was addressed:
Top left corner.
Strictly Private and Confidential
Middle
Case evidence submitted 10. May. 1999.
F.A.O. Presiding Officer.
Discipline Case Ff M Hyde.
Bottom right corner.
#3

Wednesday, August 10, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 155 East of England Fire and Rescue Control Centre

Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA

Tel 01502 403842

10th May 1999

Dear Presiding officer,

I am writing on behalf of Ff Hyde in my capacity as his representative. I Apologise for writing to you ahead of the tribunal as these matters are normally dealt with by the Investigating Officer. The latter has refused (21st April 1999) further correspondence.

I am currently reviewing the case of Ff Hyde and constructing his defence to the charge, CONDUCT PREJUDICIAL TO DISCIPLINE.

"which offence is committed where a member of the Fire Brigade WHILE ON DUTY or IN UNIFORM acts in a manner which is, or likely to be prejudicial to the discipline of the Brigade."

Using the above definition I ask you today (10th May 1999) to withdraw the document headed Note for Case, which begins, At 1800 hours on Friday 29th January."

I ask you to ensure the document is not viewed by any tribunal dealing with the above charge.
To reiterate, the above charge relates to actions or events while on duty and in uniform. Ff Hyde was not on duty, nor in uniform, on 29th January 1999.
I also draw your attention to the fact that the document is not competent, being without date or authorship.
I ask you to consider these points and inform me further as to your decision.

Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, GIFireE.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 154 Chris Wallis Suffolk FBU

Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA

Tel 01502 403842

10th May 1999

Dear ACFO Seager,

I assume your position, as notified 21st April remains current.

Please pass the enclosure herein to the presiding officer. It remains immediate attention.

Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, GIFireE.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 153 Suffolk RFU

Suffolk County Council

Fire Service

A Wigglesworth Esq
Lowestoft Fire Station
Lowestoft
NR32 2QA


KES/DISC/Hyde
ACFO Seager
(01473) 588939
10th May 1999

Dear Mr Wigglesworth,

Fire Services (Discipline) Regulations, 1985

Thank you for your letter dated 6th May 1999 and enclosed sealed envelope.

I have placed the unopened envelope in the safe at Brigade Headquarters for safekeeping until the hearing date.

Arrangements for the hearing are being made by the Personnel Manager. Please forward details of the witnesses Mr Hyde intends to call to Miss Davies at your earliest convenience in order that the necessary arrangements can be made for the hearing.

I have copied this letter to Mr Craig Jones at Messers Thompsons Solicitors in accordance with Mr Hyde’s earlier request.

Yours sincerely

K. E. Seager,
Assistant Chief Fire Officer (Technical)
Brigade Investigating Officer

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 152 Ken Edward Seager


Thompsons
Solicitors

CONGRESS HOUSE
GREAT RUSSELL STREET
LONDOM
WC1B 3LW
DX 35722 BLOOMSBURY
TEL 0171 637 9761
FAX 0171 637 0000
Fax 0181-546 5187
CDJ/FBU/F98/60224

Mr M Hyde
Lowestoft

By Post only

7 May, 1999

Dear Mr Hyde,

DISCIPLINE CHARGES AND LITIGATION IN THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT

I enclose a copy of the letter I have today received from DCFO Smith (Doc 149). His interpretation of the status quo provision renders it useless in my view. I do not think that it will have been what was intended. It is useful to compare the status quo provision in the Grey Book. This may be something that the FBU wishes to raise with the County Council to clarify. If the grievance procedure was negotiated then someone needs to decide what the intention behind the procedure was. I want to try and get a copy of the transcript from the Wigglesworth hearing so that I can review what evidence Mr Smith gave to the Disciplinary Tribunal about the "status quo" provision.

Yours sincerely


Craig Jones
For THOMPSONS

The suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 151 Carl Francis Suffolk FBU



Re Doc 150 Enclosed Evidence for Presiding Officer

By way of earlier correspondence ACFO Kenneth Seager (21st April 1999 – Doc 130) had indicated that he did not wish to enter into further correspondence or assist defence team.
‘So far as I am concerned, this is my final reply to the issues you raise. I will not enter into any further correspondence in the matter prior to hearing. Any further concerns you may have will, I am afraid, have to be put before the presiding officer at the hearing in order for him to determine what weight to attach to them’. Kenneth Seager 1999
In consequence, it was necessary for the defence to direct enquiries and material evidence to the Presiding Officer as nominated by ACFO Kenneth Seager.
Attached to Doc 150 was a copy of the memo Sub Officer Wigglesworth 19th April 1999 (Doc 122), a copy of the Legal opinion passed to DO Colin Hodge 12th February 1999 (Doc 44) and a copy of contemporaneous notes written by Sub Officer Wigglesworth during the course of the grievance hearing 12th February 1999 (Doc 43)
The envelope conveying the attachments was addressed:
Top left corner.
Strictly Private and Confidential
Middle
Case evidence submitted 6. May. 1999.
F.A.O. Presiding Officer.
Discipline Case Ff M Hyde.
Bottom right corner.
#2

Saturday, August 06, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 150 Mrs Sarah Meelan


Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA
Tel 01502 403842
6th May 1999

Dear ACFO Seager,


I have received your letter to me dated 5th May 1999.
I refer you back to your letter to me 21st April 1999. The last paragraph therein is quite specific, as you will recall the words used are,
"I WILL NOT ENTER INTO ANY FURTHER CORRESPONDENCE IN THE MATTER PRIOR TO THE HEARING."
The letter and enclosure from myself, to you, 29th April 1999 ensures compliance in toto with the above. To find you now personally require a witness list, when you have apparently abdicated such responsibility to the presiding officer post 21st April 1999 leaves me baffled and utterly confused.
In complying with your request set out above to further evidence, witness statements and the names of witnesses should surely go to the presiding officer. If this is not the case will you please advise me if you have changed your mind with regard to correspondence as notified by yourself 21st April 1999.
Accepting your position 21st April 1999 is still current I ask you to pass the further evidence attached to the presiding officer.
Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, GIFireE.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 149 Rhyl Fire Station


Suffolk County Council
Fire Service
Thompsons Solicitors
Congress House
Great Russell street
LONDON
WC1B 3LW
CDJ/FBU/F98/60224
SAS/SIS
SA Smith
01473 588939
5th May 1999

Dear Sirs,
Thank you for your letter of 22nd April 1999.

I have to say that I am disappointed at the tone and tenor of your letter. Indeed in your very first paragraph you suggest, wrongly, that the Suffolk Fire Service treats FBU representatives in a less than fair manner. The implication is that the Brigade has meted out unfair treatment to an FBU representative on an earlier occasion. If this is a reference to a recent disciplinary hearing of a member of the Brigade, who happened also to be an FBU representative, you will no doubt recollect that the particular hearing was before an elected member panel which found two of three charges proven and imposed serious disciplinary awards.
I disagree with your view on whether the Chief Fire Officer, Mr Alcock, should hear the discipline charges against Mr Hyde. I, as Deputy Chief Fire Officer, have dealt with Mr Hyde’s grievance. Mr Alcock has not involved himself in the grievance, despite correspondence having being addressed to him. I therefore see no reason why Mr Alcock should not sit on the hearing of the disciplinary charges.
You appear in your letter to have some difficulty with the Brigade’s interpretation of paragraph 12, page 4, of the grievance Procedures. In my view the wording of paragraph 12 has a quite different meaning from the one that you would choose to place upon it.
Your client was advised on 19 January 1999 that he would revert to firefighter rank as of 1 February 1999.
Your client lodged a grievance on 29 Janaury 1999. However, at the time of lodging the grievance your client had been advised as to what would happen; in effect there were conditions existing at the time of registration of the grievance that Mr Hyde would revert to his firefighter rank. Paragraph 12 requires some careful scrutiny. The way you interpret the paragraph cannot be correct. The term "status quo" is perhaps a misleading way of describing the paragraph. Those words do not appear within it. In a disciplined service the way you have interpreted paragraph 12 would be a total nonsense. It would effectively mean that any member of the Brigade who, at any time, took a dislike to any instruction or order that he was given, could invoke the grievance procedure and thereby avoid compliance, at least for the time being, with an order. This would mean at its worst that, in a disciplined service, one would have to run the Brigade by consent.
The only sensible construction that can be put on paragraph 12 in the context of a uniformed and disciplined service, and I have to say if one also pays close heed to the exact words of paragraph 12, is as follows. It is the conditions existing "prior to the registration of the grievance" which will continue. In the present case, at that time Mr Hyde was subject of a condition, or state of affairs, that would see him revert at 1 February 1999 to firefighter rank. Immediately prior to registration he was going to revert: that is what happened; that, in my view, was entirely proper.
You will therefore appreciate that I find your interpretation of paragraph 12 unsustainable in the context of a disciplined service.
You will be quick, no doubt, to appreciate that your interpretation would be capable of undermining Brigade discipline and further capable of abuse by those seeking to undermine the operation of the Brigade.
Further, I do not accept that the way in which the Brigade interpreted paragraph 12 was a breach of Mr Hyde’s contract. It is a separate point, as you are aware, which led to the decision as to why Mr hyde should be paid for loss of pay.
In the final paragraph of page 2 of your letter you state that this is the second time you have seen Suffolk Fire Service react to a grievance by the use of Discipline Regulations. I put on record that in my view this is total speculation on your part. Your suggestion is that discipline proceedings are brought for an improper motive. Reference to the other case that you are no doubt referring to ended in two charges proven and awards given by an elected member tribunal.
I note that you consider that the matter of your client’s grievance should proceed to the stage 4.1.12. on 22 February 1999 your client’s memo of 20 February 1999 was received, in which he advised he wished to proceed to the next stage of the grievance mechanism. On 1 march 1999 my secretary contacted your client to discuss dates for the grievance hearing. Mr Hyde supplied dates and a contact telephone number. Mr Hyde gave no indication then that he wished to proceed to the next stage of the grievance procedure.
It became clear to my secretary after checking my diary that a hearing in March would not be possible on the availability dates supplied. After numerous failed attempts to contact Mr Hyde between 3 March and 4 March, a letter was sent to Mr Hyde on 9 March offering dates in April. Why was it the case that your client supplied availability dates on 1 March 1999 when it appears that on 28 February 199 he wrote a memo asking to proceed to the next stage? Further, on 6 March 1999 when your client wrote to the Chief Executive, no mention was made that dates were being looked at to have the grievance hearing before myself heard. The conversation with my secretary and the impression conveyed to her and the memo of 28 February 1999 are clearly at odds with each other. To be even more precise, the memo of 28th February 1999 was not received at these headquarters until some time after it was written. The first knowledge we had of its existence was on 16 march 1999 when a copy of it was appended to a fax sent to me by Mr Hyde. In my view the discussion your client entered into over dates indicated a clear mutuality of agreement to extend time limits and, as I have already expressed in my letter of 19 March 1999, I find your client’s conduct in this regard to be disingenuous to say the least.
I have no wish to enter into any idle speculation as to what was in your client’s mind when he initiated the County Court action.
I correct the position as stated by you regarding the County Court action. Your client was advised in a letter from the County Secretary and solicitor dated 18 March 1999 that in view of the willingness of the Brigade to settle the case, the sensible course of action would be for Mr Hyde to agree to withdraw his claim against Mr Alcock personally upon the basis of admission of liability by Suffolk County Council. Upon receiving written notification of withdrawal of the claim, the County Secretary and Solicitor would advise payment of the sum sought, and as described in the letter, to your client. If Mr Hyde has not yet received any payment it will be because he has not complied with what was discussed with the County secretary and Solicitor. I understand that the County Secretary and Solicitor is now responding to your letter of 23 April and that this matter should shortly be resolved.
I note your comments in the final paragraph on page 3 of your letter. The Brigade is, of course, free to serve discipline papers on one of its officers at any time. I agree it is unfortunate if one has one’s personal possessions tampered with and I note that your complaint has been passed to the Chief Executive to have the matter considered. However, I also take the view that one must take personal responsibility for safeguarding one’s personal and confidential possessions; the prime responsibility for ensuring that lies with the individual.
I note your comments in the final page of your letter. They are, of course, points that Mr Hyde may wish to make in his defence of the discipline charges with which he has been served. It is for the body that conducts the discipline hearing to determine whether the discipline charges are proven, taking into account all the circumstances of the case.
I utterly refute the conclusion that your reach in the final sentence of the large paragraph of page 4 of your letter.
In conclusion, the discipline proceedings must take their course and I see no reason to intervene in that process. However, in view of Mr Hyde’s quite clear desire to have the grievance proceed to an elected member hearing I am requesting the County Director of Personnel to arrange a grievance hearing as soon as possible.
If I have not responded to any specific point within your letter it does not necessarily mean that I accept your client’s version of events or indeed his view of a particular situation.

Yours faithfully


S A Smith
Deputy Chief Fire Officer

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 148 Wrentham Fire Station

Suffolk County Council

Fire Service

A Wigglesworth Esq
Lowestoft Fire Station
Lowestoft
NR32 2QA

KES/DISC/Hyde
ACFO Seager
(01473) 588939
5th May 1999
Dear Mr Wigglesworth,

Fire services (Discipline) Regulations, 1985

Thank you for your letter dated 29th April 1999 and enclosed sealed envelope.

I have placed the envelope (unopened of course) in the safe at Brigade Headquarters until the hearing is convened.

On this point, it will be helpful to have Firefighter Hyde’s list of potential witnesses as soon as possible in order that the arrangements for the hearing can be made.

Yours sincerely

K. E. Seager,
Assistant Chief Fire Officer (Technical)
Brigade Investigating Officer

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 147 DCFO K Seager

Overview of Events May 1999

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 146 Suffolk Firefighter Industrial Action



Rationale of Doc 145

By way of earlier correspondence ACFO Kenneth Seager (21st April 1999 – Doc 130) had indicated that he did not wish to enter into further correspondence or assist defence team.

‘So far as I am concerned, this is my final reply to the issues you raise. I will not enter into any further correspondence in the matter prior to hearing. Any further concerns you may have will, I am afraid, have to be put before the presiding officer at the hearing in order for him to determine what weight to attach to them’. Kenneth Seager 1999

The defence were now in the process of constructing a bundle for the perusal and analysis of inconsistencies by the responsible officer, official or agent of the Fire Authority. As ACFO had abdicated such responsibility and nominated the presiding officer for such office material evidence was conveyed that way.
Clearly the defence demonstrated they could match the immature childish behaviour of the superior ACFO K Seager.
Attached to Doc 145 was a copy of the transcript produced by the defence team during the prosecution interview of Firefighter Hyde on 23rd March 1999 (Doc 75 & Doc 78). Early provision was made to avoid a claim of acute falsification by the prosecution team at hearing.
The envelope conveying Doc 145 was addressed:
Top left corner.
Strictly Private and Confidential
Middle
Case evidence submitted 29. April. 1999.
F.A.O. Presiding Officer.
Discipline Case Ff M Hyde.
Bottom right corner.
#1

Friday, August 05, 2005

The suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 145 Suffolk Female Firefighter


Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA

Tel 01502 403842
29th April 1999

Dear ACFO Seager,

I have received your letter informing me that you do not wish to indulge in further correspondence with regard to the discipline prosecution concerning Ff Hyde. At the same time I note all further matters are to be dealt with by the presiding officer.

On the basis that Ff Hyde is highly likely to call upon the C.F.O & D.C.F.O. as witnesses the presiding officer will

I assume be an elected member. As such I ask you to forward the envelope with evidence enclosed to the presiding officer whoever it may be.

Yours faithfully

A Wigglesworth BSc, MBA, G.I.Fire.E.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 144 Suffolk Retained Firemen

CDJ/FBU/F98/60224
Mr M Hyde
Lowestoft

By Post only

29th April, 1999

Dear Mr Hyde,

DISCIPLINE CHARGES AND LITIGATION IN THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT

Thank you for your letter received by facsimile today.
Under the provisions of the Regulations, I am not entitled to represent you at a hearing before the Chief Officer. I can only provide advice to you and your accused’s friend, Mr Wigglesworth.

The letter to the DCFO is highly unlikely to result in the charges against you being dropped. It has been written principally with the intention of setting the Brigade up later for an accusation that they are discriminating against trade unionists. It has also been written with the firm intention of producing it at any appeal hearing before the Disciplinary Tribunal of the Fire Authority and the Secretary of state if necessary. No doubt DCFO Smith is taking advice on how to properly respond. Either that or he is simply ignoring it. If he wishes to do that then so be it, there is nothing I can do to prevent that.
With regard to the Chief hearing your case. I suggest that Mr Wigglesworth makes representations to the presenting officer about the appropriate forum for the hearing. My understanding was that the Chief had already been involved in this case and that the policy in Suffolk was that where there had been prior involvement in a case by the Chief Fire Officer, the matter was inappropriate for the Chief and was dealt with by the Disciplinary Tribunal of the Fire Authority. This needs to be set out in writing in a letter to the presenting officer well in advance of any hearing, with a warning that if the presenting officer insists on the Chief dealing with the matter, then you reserve the right to draw attention to that letter should it be necessary subsequently to appeal. It will be helpful if the letter explains the extent of the Chief’s involvement. Remember, there are two purposes to the letter, one to achieve the result the letter says is desired but two, to be put in front of any subsequent appeal panel.
I agree that orders and the service of papers should be dealt with direct with you. Mr Seager’s offer to copy me in correspondence is one that you should gratefully accept.
I suggest that you or Mr Wigglesworth write to Mr Seager in the following terms:
Thank you for your letter 27th April 1999. I am grateful for your offer to copy in Mr Jones with any correspondence relating to this matter and I accept that offer. I have told Mr Jones that he will hear from you from time to time.
However, I am concerned that this matter will be heard by the Chief Fire Officer. The Chief Fire officer already has prior knowledge of this matter in that he ……(details of the Chief Fire Officer’s previous involvement). That being so, I do not think he can fairly and independently hear this case under the provisions of the fire Services (Discipline) Regulations 1985. In the past, such circumstances have always led to the Disciplinary Tribunal of the fire authority hearing the case under regulation 9(2)(b) instead of the Chief Fire Officer. Will you please consider this and confirm whether you are prepared to arrange for this matter to be dealt with by the Disciplinary Tribunal of the Fire Authority. If you are not, can you please explain why not.
With regards to orders and statements, I am happy to accept both of these personally while on duty.
I reserve the right to refer this correspondence if it becomes necessary to appeal any decision.
No doubt you and Mr Wigglesworth can amend the letter as you see fit.

Yours sincerely
Craig Jones
For THOMPSONS

The suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 143 Suffolk Retained Fireman


Suffolk County Council

Fire Service

M Hyde Esq
Lowestoft

KES/DISC/Hyde/SIS
ACFO Seager
(01473) 588939
27th April 1999
Dear Mr Hyde,
Fire services (Discipline) Regulations, 1985

Thank you for your fax of the 26th April notifying me that Mr Craig Jones of Messrs Thompsons is dealing on your behalf with your discipline and grievance matters.
Whilst I am happy to copy items to Mr Jones, I cannot deal exclusively with Mr Jones as you request.
Where documents must be served, or if it necessary to issue orders, say for instance for your attendance at a disciplinary hearing, I believe I must ensure that you are dealt with in person, rather than through an intermediary. If you disagree, please let me know.
Can I also ask, whilst writing, whether or not Mr Wigglesworth continues to be your accused friend, and if so whether or not I should continue to copy correspondence to him in addition to Mr Jones?
I feel I ought to point out for the aviodance of doubt that you are only entitled to be represented at a hearing by "….a member of a fire brigade selected by [you] of a rank junior to that of the officer hearing the case" – (notes for guidance, annex D, paragraph 6 – page 13). This rules out legal representation at this stage.
If anything in this letter is unclear, please do not hesitate to contact me again.
Yours sincerely

K. E. Seager,
Assistant Chief Fire Officer (Technical)
Brigade Investigating Officer

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 142 Suffolk Fire Service Planning and Review

Spare

The Suffolk hyde Affair - Doc 141 Suffolk Fire Service Operations

CDJ/FBU/F98/60224
Mr M Hyde
Lowestoft

By Post only

26th April, 1999

Dear Mr Hyde,

DISCIPLINE CHARGES AND LITIGATION IN THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT

Thank you for your letter of 26TH April 1999.

I am concerned by the contents of page 4. You say that ADO Smith wrote an account of the meeting with yourself which he then showed to you. Sometime after, ADO smith was reprimanded by ACFO Seager and ADO
Saward and asked ADO Smith to falsify the report of the meeting.
In addition, you suggest that ADO Saward was at your house acting improperly and that you have witness statements. I note that you have registered a complaint with DO Hodge and no doubt he is investigating this. However, the attempt to persuade ADO smith to falsify a Brigade document may be something else that DO Hodge should investigate. You will of course need the support of DO Hodge.

Yours sincerely
Craig Jones
For THOMPSONS

Thursday, August 04, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 140 Felixstowe Retained Firefighter

Lowestoft
NR 33 9BT

Thompson’s Solicitors
Congress House
Great Russell Street
London
WC1B 3LW
Fax 01716370000

Ref CDJ/FBU/F98/60224

26th April 1999

Dear Craig

With reference to NOTE FOR FILE dated 19th January 1999 – meeting with T/ASDO Saward and myself.
On that day T/ADO Saward asked me to revert back to Firefighter. I said to him, ‘Is this an order?’ He said ‘No, I am asking you.’
I then replied that if he was only asking, I would not revert. I referred him to the memorandum dated 25.09.98 from ADO Fuller. He then said that the letter was ‘flawed.’
I told him that I did not understand what he was talking about. I told him that I was tired of being picked on and messed around. I asked him who’s idea it was to revert my rank. He said that it was his. I said that I did not believe him. I told him to check his facts regarding this matter as I knew he was wrong and I said I would be prepared to take the matter further. At no time was I abusive. In fact T/ADO Saward was very nervous and not comfortable with what he was proposing.
As his note for file states it was only a proposal at this stage and the meeting ended with both parties left to reflect on the situation.
I then received, on 25th January, T/ADO Saward’s letter dated 20th January 1999. I was very surprised that he was confirming a situation that never happened. How can one confirm a proposal without any further discussion together with a proposed date for this to take place.
I was not ordered until the 5th February.
This took place at my grievance hearing with T/ADO Saward, witnessed by ADO E. Smith and Firefighter Mark Gilbert (FBU branch chair at the time). to get to the point I asked T/ADO Saward again if he was ordering me to revert my rank. He still stated that he was not ordering me, he was asking me. I said to him, ‘if that is the case what does his letter dated 20th January mean?’
He stated that it was an instruction, ‘I said do you mean an order?’ He said ‘No.’
I then said, ‘for Gods sake man your confusing me, if its an order, order me.’
He then said ‘alright then it’s an order.’
I then said ‘right I will remove my rank markings’ which I did there and then.
I then said that after some enquiries I may well be replacing them. He then asked me if I wanted him to confirm what his decision is orally. I said that I did not want anything orally from him and wanted it in writing, this he agreed to, but it has never happened.
With regards to minutes in the bundle (meeting between FF M Hyde and ADO Saward) T/ADO Saward states that ADO E Smith took contemporaneous notes. This is not true and has been reported to me by ADO Smith in front of the watch who are my witnesses regarding this. ADO E Smith was asked to write a report later by T/ADO Saward. This he did from memory several days later. He let me read his report before sending it. It was not accurate and he said it was only his personal notes.
Later ADO E Smith told me in front of the watch again that he had his knuckles rapped by ACFO Seager for showing me his account and appraisal.
T/ADO Saward wanted him to change his account and say that I was abusive. ADO E smith said that he could not do that as it was not the case.
With regards to T/ADO Saward’s NOTE FOR FILE (29.01.99) I want this withdrawn from all proceedings. The charge that is levied is appertaining to a member on duty and in uniform, I was not on duty or in uniform.
T/ADO Saward’s account of his visit to my house has no foundation at all. I am in the process of getting witness statements regarding this visit. In essence T/ADO Saward was peeping through the window at my wife and daughter and caused them alarm and distress. That is why I went outside after him. My window is no where near the front door and he had to deliberately go out of his way to peep through the window at my wife and daughter.
I did report this to DO Hodge by letter shortly afterwards but he denies having received a complaint form from me.

With regards to your second question dated 22.04.99. I was unable to attend an off duty meeting with T/ADO Saward on the 4th February and arranged to meet him on the 5th when I was on duty.
I hope that this letter clarifies a few things
Yours sincerely

M Hyde

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 139 Malcolm Hewitt Alcock

CDJ/FBU/F98/60224

Mr A Wigglesworth
10 Somerleyton Road
Lowestoft
NR32 4RD

By Post only

26th April, 1999

Dear Mr Wigglesworth,

DISCIPLINE CHARGES AGAINST MR MICHAEL HYDE

Thank you for your facsimile of today’s date and the associated documentation upon which you asked me to advise. I am not entirely sure what it is you wish me to advise on. I have seen your letter of 6th March but not the reply 10th March although I see that the charge sheet has been revised.
As I understand it, Mr Seager is saying that as he is concerned, the charge is adequately particularised. I think that the facts as set out in the Particulars of the Charge are probably accepted by Mr hyde and it is difficult for him to argue that he does not know the allegation that he faces. Mr Hyde has much better points in his favour than this procedural point about a lack of time being specified in the Particulars. The question is whether the orders given were lawful or reasonable in light of the County Council’s admissions and the terms of the grievance procedure etc.
By all means underline those procedural failings, but I would not suggest that you make any great issue about it. It is highly unlikely to help Mr Hyde and is likely to take up your time and cloud the issue in this case.
No doubt you have seen my letter to DCFO smith, a copy of which as sent to Mr Hyde.

Yours sincerely
Craig Jones
For THOMPSONS

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 138 Sproughton Resident

Lowestoft Fire station
PO Box 54
Lowestoft
NR 32 2QA
Tel 01502 403842

24-04-99

Dear ACFO Seager,

In response to the papers served to me by DO Middleton at County Hall 13th April.
Notwithstanding, your refusal to provide further particulars when requested by letter 6th march 1999 and during the interview 23rd March 1999 from which 6 pages of notes were made, the papers served 13th April 1999 do to a limited extent enable me to provide more informed answers to the questions posed by DO Smith on 23rd March 1999. Indeed, this is the first opportunity you provide me to do so.
My response, to the relevant questions are set out below;

GS
When were you first aware that the temporary promotion arrangements on your watch were being reconsidered.

MH
Early December when I was informed by FF D Kemp that he was approached to take over my role, to which I was never consulted by T/ADO Saward.

GS
At a meeting on 19/01/99 between yourself and ADO saward were you abusive in your responses to Mr Saward.

MH
No. At all times during my meetings with T/ADO Saward the dialogue from myself has been conducted in a business like and mild measured manner.

GS
At the same meeting did you say words to the effect of, ‘ You have picked on the wrong one and had better be careful because you would come after him and win?’

MH
No. Those words have not been used in any meeting between myself and T/ADO saward, nor have any which would have similar effect.

GS
Did you receive a memo from ADO Saward, dated 20/01/99, instructing you to revert to the rank of Ff effective 01/01/99.

MH
I have received a memo so dated from T/ADO Sawrd on 25/01/99 which I cannot agree is a true version of preceding events to which it refers.

GS
Did you revert to the rank of Ff on 01/02/99.

MH
I was not on duty on 01/02/99. I also remind you I had submitted a grievance 29/01/99 and direct you to the status quo provision page 4 step 12 and 4.4 page 8.

GS
Did you revert to the rank of Ff on 04/02/99.

MH
If I might refer you to my response to question 5 above.

GS
Did you seek advice on this issue and replace your rank markings on either the 4th or 5th February 1999.

MH
I am well aware of my rights contained within my contract to submit a grievance and the status quo it confers. My advice is contained in page 4 step 12 and 4.4 page 8 of the relevant procedure. This was confirmed by Brigade union officials.

GS
Have you at any time received advice to disobey the written order, dated 21/01/99 from ADO Saward to yourself.

MH
I have absolutely no recollection or record of any order issued to me by T/ADO Saward on the date to which you refer.

I take it that the responses I give in good faith will provide some clarification of the matters in dispute. At the same time I advise you that I do not accept that the contents of many of the documents served on 13th april represent a true record, to which I will expand in good time. However, as a logical starting point and first instance I ask you to supply corroborating evidence for document 1, note for file. More importantly I also ask you to supply the name of the complainant from which this prosecution stems, together with the initiating report.

Yours faithfully

M Hyde

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 137 Thompsons Solicitors

Suffolk County Council

Fire Service

Operations Department, Normanston Drive, Lowestoft
Facsimile Transmission Covering Letter

To: NAME Mr Craig Jones
COMPANY Thompson’s Solicitors
FAX NO. 01716370000

FROM: NAME A Wigglesworth
DATE 23rd April 1999
FAX NO. 01502 403469

Instructions
Ref CDJ/FBU/F98/60224
With regard to the case of M Hyde. I enclose the latest letter (DCFO Seager 21st April 1999 – Doc 137). Of particular concern is the last paragraph, can you advise. A Wigglesworth.

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 136 Suffolk Lawyer


Suffolk County Council

Fire Service

M Hyde Esq
Lowestoft

SAS/SIS
Mr SASmith
01473 588939
23rd April 1999

Dear Mr Hyde,

In response to your fax of the 19th April 1999, I would refer you to my letter of the 19th March.
The final paragraph clearly states that your County Court summons against the County Council has resulted in the resolution of your grievance. This remains the Brigade’s position. If you consider that your grievance has not been resolved, would you kindly explain to me why you believe that to be the case.

Yours sincerely

S A Smith
Deputy Chief Fire Officer

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 135 FSYTA Lowestoft

OUTCOME DOC 134

Nil

Document 134 was sent to Firefighter Hyde after acceptance had already been made. Craig Jones the solicitor instructed by Thompsons to act on behalf of Firefighter Hyde was unaware that the proceedings had been resolved when drafting the consent order. The terms of the order were made with a view for further action upon other developments associated with the ongoing discipline prosecution.

Wednesday, August 03, 2005

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 134 Suffolk FBU Media Briefing


IN THE LOWESTOFT COUNTY COURT

Case No LO900306

BETWEEN
MICHAEL JOHN HYDE
Plaintiff
AND
MR M ALCOCK C.F.O
Defendant
CONSENT ORDER


UPON THE PARTIES AGREEING TERMS OF SETTLEMENT BY CONSENT it is ordered:
The Plaintiff be at Liberty to accept the sum of £386.50 in full and final settlement of his claim for damages herein.

The Defendant do pay to the Plaintiff witin 7 days of the date of this order the sum of £386.50.
Upon payment of the above sum, all further proceedings in this action be stayed.
There be Liberty to apply.
WE CONSENT TO AN ORDER IN THE ABOVE TERMS
…………………………………………………………………...
Mr Michael Hyde Mr M Alcock C.F.O.
Lowestoft Suffolk Fire Service
Plaintiff Brigade Headquarters
Colchester road
Ipswich
Suffolk Defendant
Dated the day of 1999

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 133 Suffolk FBU Press Release

CDJ/FBU/F98/60224
Mr S A Smith
Deputy Chief Fire Officer
Suffolk Fire Service
Fire Service headquarters
Colchester Road
Ipswich
Suffolk IP4 4SS

By Post only

22nd April, 1999

Dear Mr Alcock,

FIREFIGHTER MICHAEL HYDE
YOUR REFERENCE: LMH/SMM/HQ10

It is with despair that I find my self once again embroiled in correspondence with the Suffolk Fire service over the treatment of a representative of the Fire Brigades Union.
I am instructed by the above named who is employed in the Suffolk Fire service. Mr Hyde has been charged with conduct prejudicial to the discipline of the brigade under the Fire Services (discipline) Regulations 1985. Initially, I intended to write to the Chief Fire Officer but I have seen your letter of 16th April 1999 and in light of its comments have decided not to do that out of courtesy. However, I do not consider that the Chief Fire officer is in a position to hear the charges in any event. Much of the correspondence relating to the grievance has been addressed to him and therefore he cannot approach the matter with the impartiality which your letter of 16th April 1999 quite rightly stresses.
Mr Hyde has been charged for conduct prejudicial to the discipline of the Brigade in that he failing to relinquish his temporary promotion and to revert to his substantive rank when ordered to do so by Assistant Divisional Officer Fuller and by Sub Officer Tiffen. You may be familiar with the background but I fear that this letter may end up being shown to various decision making bodies and therefore I shall set out the facts for completeness:
On 25th September 1998, Assistant Divisional Officer Fuller sent to Mr Hyde a memorandum telling him that he was temporarily promoted from Sunday 27th September until such time as Leading Fire-fighter Brown returned from sickness. Mr hyde agreed to this temporay promotion on the basis that it would be his until the return of Leading Fire-fighter Brown. On Tuesday 19th January 1999, Assistant divisional Officer Sward spoke to Fire-fighter Hyde, telling him that other Fire-fighters had now returned to duty and were going to receive the temporary promotion instead and therefore Fire- fighter Hyde would revert to his rank as of 1st February 1999. Fire-fighter Hyde took exception to this because he had understood that he would retain the temporary promotion until such time as Leading Fire-fighter Brown returned to duties. On 20th January, ADO Saward sent written confirmation to Fire-fighter Hyde of the discussion on the previous day. In response on 29th January 1999, Fire-fighter Hyde lodged a grievance under the Suffolk County Council Grievance Procedure. This grievance was acknowledged by ADO Saward on 29th January 1999. I was of course able to hear your evidence at the recent hearing of Sub-Officer Wigglesworth’s case and I recall that you explained clearly to the members of the tribunal on that occasion that by invoking the grievance procedure, the status quo as it was put was preserved pending the resolution of the grievance. I now have the benefit of seeing a copy of the grievance procedure itself and I see that on page 4, paragraph 12 the evidence that you gave is quite correct. It is surprising therefore that ADO Saward refused to observe this provision. Two senior officers, ADO Saward and Divisional Officer Hodge seem to be either unaware of this provision or alternatively are willing to show wholesale disregard for its contents. This will no doubt be of concern to you because as you are aware from Sub-officer Wigglesworth’s recent case, the decision to unlawfully deduct wages was the subject of a grievance which was stayed pending the disciplinary process but again, although the grievance was lodged on or around 4th June 1998, the wages were still deducted at the end of that month. Again, the status quo provision in the grievance procedure was totally disregarded. The procedures are stated at page 1, paragraph 5 of the procedure booklet to be part of an employee’s contract and I consider that the failure to observe the status quo provision is in fact a breach of an employee’s contract.
The grievance (at stage 4.1.1) was not resolved by ADO Saward and so went up to DO Hodge (stage 4.1.6) who was also unable to resolve it. It seems that ADO Saward took advice from someone regarding the status quo provision of the grievance procedure although it is not clear in the paperwork who that third party was. I must confess that I disagree with that third party and DO Hodge. Under the terms of his contract, Firefighter Hyde is entitled to the status quo prior to the registration of the grievance being preserved. The status quo was that he was a temporary Leading Fire-fighter. Failure to preserve that was a breach of contract and was therefore unlawful.
The grievance then went to the Chief Fire Officer (stage 4.1.10) by way of a request by facsimile on 20th February which was replied to no 22nd February 1999. The Chief Fire Officer had referred the matter to yourself presumably to set up a meeting. On 28th February, Mr Hyde had not heard of a date for a meeting with the Chief Fire Officer and so, relying on paragraph 4.1.15 asked for the grievance to proceed to stage 4.1.12 – complaint to the Appeals Panel of members drawn from the Personnel Sub Committee and the Environment and Protection Committee. On the following day, 1st march 1999, the Brigade sent out a letter under Regulation 7 of the Fire services (discipline) Regulations 1985 telling Mr Hyde that he was under investigation for his refusal to revert to his substantive rank. This is the second time that I have seen Suffolk Fire Service react to a grievance by use of the Discipline regulations. On that same day Mr Hyde was contacted by your secretary, Sigi Schwabe with a view to arranging a date for the grievance to be heard by yourself. Nothing further was heard so on 5th March 1999, Mr Hyde began proceedings against Mr Alcock in his capacity as Chief Fire Officer for the Brigade in the County court for damages for breach of contract because he was unable to proceed with his grievance. No doubt he had in mind the experience of Sub Officer Wigglesworth who, having lodged a grievance the subject of which later became the subject of discipline proceedings, found that his grievance was stayed while the Brigade got on with the job of disciplining him.
On 6th March 1999, Firefighter Hyde wrote to Lynn Homer the Chief Executive complaining that the grievance procedure seemed to be going nowhere and asking her to intervene.
On 9th March, your secretary wrote to Fire-fighter hyde saying that you could not make the dates put forward and offering new dates from mid April onwards.
On 18th March, the County Secretary and Solicitor wrote to Mr Hyde conceding that he was entitled to 90 days notice of the termination of the contract for the temporary promotion. This is important because it establishes that the order given verbally by ADO Saward on 19yth January and confirmed in writing on 20th January was indeed in breach of the contract and was unlawful. That being so, Fire-fighter Hyde is now being disciplined for failing to obey an unlawful order.
On 19th March, you wrote to Firefighter Hyde suggesting that because he had put forward dates as late as 31st march he had agreed to vary the time limits contained within the grievance procedure. I disagree. Paragraph 4.1.15 imposes a time limit of 7 days for dealing with the grievance at any stage. Fire-fighter Hyde requested the next stage of the grievance on 20th February and was told you were dealing with it. Dates were suggested by Fire-fighter Hyde on 1st March 1999 but by 6th March, 14 days after the grievance was lodged no date had been set he enquired why the next stage of the grievance had been effected. In any event, the next stage had been proceeded to on 28th February, before your secretary had contacted fire-fighter Hyde so effectively, your involvement in the grievance procedure was over at that stage.
The other point in your letter is that the County Solicitors department has dealt with Firefighter Hyde’s County Court Summons. This is not correct. The Department has conceded that the money is owed but have paid Fire-fighter Hyde nothing. The claim is no more dealt with than it was when the grievance was first lodged. I have written to the County Solicitors department about this today.
On 8th April, the Chief Executive wrote to Fire-fighter Hyde having been informed by the Chief Fire Officer that you were dealing with the grievance. I am surprised that this has happened as Fire-fighter Hyde is now contractually entitled to have his grievance heard by the Appeal Panel. Accordingly, I have written to Ms Homer of the Chief Executive today about this.
The final and most disappointing aspect to this sequence of events occurred while Fire-fighter Hyde, in his capacity of a Fire Brigades Union representative was in attendance at the Discipline Hearing for Sub Officer Wigglesworth. In the morning, Fire-fighter Hyde was served with the discipline charge papers although quite why that could not wait until a more appropriate time is beyond me. fire-fighter Hyde tells me that over a lunch break, the papers relating to his case which he had with him had been tampered with and removed from his file. I understand that a complaint about this has been forwarded to the Chief Executive of the Council and also to the Chief Fire Officer.
It is quite clear that the council accepts that the failure by ADO Saward to give Fire-fighter Hyde 90 days’ notice of the termination of the temporary promotion was a breach of contract and therefore renders the order unlawful. To discipline Fire-fighter Hyde in these circumstances is quite wrong and I invite you to withdraw the charges against Fire-fighter Hyde. If one looks at all the events, it is easy to see numerous disciplinary offences. ADO Saward has given an unlawful order and has refused to allow Fire-fighter Hyde his contractual right to have the status quo preserved pending the determination of the grievance – conduct prejudicial to the reputation of the Brigade. Divisional Officer Hodge has repeated the failure to allow Fire-fighter Hyde’s contractual right to have the status quo preserved pending the determination of the grievance - conduct prejudicial to the reputation of the Brigade. The Chief himself has failed to respond in time to Fire- fighter Hyde’s grievance – neglect of duty and similarly because the Chief Fire Officer has asked you to deal with the matter for him, you yourself have failed to respond in time to the grievance – neglect of duty. I have seen rank and file fire-fighters disciplined for far less than some of the above examples. I cannot see any lawful justification for the different treatment and can only conclude that the reason why Fire-fighter Hyde is being so treated is because of his status as a representative and active member of the fire Brigades Union.
I do apologise for the length of this letter but for completeness, I though it was important to include full summary of the facts.
Please tell me what you intend to do.

Yours sincerely
Craig Jones
For THOMPSONS

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 132 Suffolk Fire Strike Media Briefing


Thompsons
Solicitors

CONGRESS HOUSE
GREAT RUSSELL STREET
LONDOM
WC1B 3LW
DX 35722 BLOOMSBURY
TEL 0171 637 9761
FAX 0171 637 0000
Fax 0181-546 5187
CDJ/FBU/F98/60224
Mr M Hyde
Lowestoft
By Post only
22 April, 1999
Dear Mr Hyde,
DISCIPLINE CHARGES AND LITIGATION IN THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT
Thank you for sending me in the paperwork. I have a few questions which I will be pleased if you will please do your best to answer.
There is a file note from T/ADO Saward (I think) which makes certain comments about you. Please tell me to what extent the note is accurate. If you disagree with what it says, please write and tell me what did take place.
Why were you unable to attend the grievance meeting on 4th February 1999.
I have written to the Brigade, the Chief Executive and to the Council. Copy letters are enclosed. If you are contacted by anyone in relation to these matters, please ask them to contact me directly.
Yours sincerely


Craig Jones
For THOMPSONS

The Suffolk Hyde Affair - Doc 131 Suffolk Fire Strike Press Release

CDJ/FBU/F98/60224
Lin Homer
Chief Executive
Suffolk County Council
St Helen Court
County Hall
Ipswich
Suffolk IP4 2JS
By Post only
22nd April, 1999
Dear Mrs homer,
FIREFIGHTER MICHAEL HYDE
YOUR REFERENCE: LMH/SMM/HQ10
I am instructed to represent Mr Michael Hyde who wrote to you on 6th March 1999 asking you to intervene in the progress of a grievance procedure. I have seen copy of your letter of 8th April 1999 to Mr Hyde.
Mr Hyde moved his grievance to stage 4.1.10 of the Suffolk County Council Grievance Procedure on 20th February 1999 and was advised by letter dated 22nd February 1999 that Deputy Chief Fire Officer smith would make arrangements for a meeting to take place as soon as possible. The seven days stipulated in paragraph 4.1.15 of the grievance procedure came an went without any further contact so Mr Hyde wrote to the Chief Fire Officer on 28th February 1999 asking for the grievance to proceed to the next stage, stage 4.1.12 – hearing before the Appeals Panel, as he is automatically entitled to do under 4.1.15. the grievance procedure is, as clearly stated at paragraph 5 of page 1, part of the employee’s contract of employment and therefore Fire- fighter Hyde is now contractually entitled to have his grievance heard by the Appeals Panel. The assurances that you have given and to which you refer at the end of your letter appear to be without foundation.
I am not sure who is responsible for arranging the hearing, but will be grateful if you will please take steps to ensure that it is arranged to take place as soon as possible and perhaps let me know what steps are taking place.
Thank you for your assistance.
Yours sincerely
Craig Jones
For THOMPSONS