🔥 FIREFIGHTERS SPEAK OUT: BROKEN TRUCKS, NO MEDICAL TRAINING, LIVES AT RISK 🔥

Kelvyn sits down with Finlay Smith, a five-year independent advocate, to expose what he uncovered inside Fire and Emergency New Zealand — and why New Zealanders should be deeply concerned.

On the day this video was recorded, Kelvyn and Finlay visited three frontline fire stations: Mangere, Papatoetoe, and Onehunga — speaking directly with crews on the ground.

It’s very clear our Firefighters don’t want to be on strike, they want to respond to New Zealander’s 111 calls with confidence – they are passionate, dedicated and take their jobs very seriously.

This conversation covers: • Fire trucks and critical equipment that don’t work

  • Firefighters sent to medical emergencies without medical training
  • Crews forced to stand by while people die waiting for ambulances
  • PTSD, suicides, cancers, and long-term trauma
  • Unsafe stations (mould, asbestos, degraded facilities)
  • Communities paying more while frontline capability declines

Finlay’s involvement began after media coverage — including from The New Zealand Herald — framed firefighters as “greedy.” What he found on the ground told a very different story.

The discussion also revisits the 1995 Citizens-Initiated Referendum, where 87.82% of voters rejected cuts to professional firefighters — a public decision later ignored as “non-binding.”

With $750 million a year flowing into the system, this raises serious questions about governance, accountability, and public safety.

Kelvyn calls for:

  • A forensic audit of Fire and Emergency NZ.
  • Transparency around procurement and spending.
  • Political accountability — including criticism of Brooke van Velden.

📩 Firefighters & whistleblowers: [email protected]
(Facts and evidence only. Off-the-record respected.)

This isn’t about party politics.
It’s about community safety, frontline workers, and lives that depend on a system that must work.

About the author: Chris
Press Secretary

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