His owner at Chrishall Grange said: "Amazingly apart from a few grazes and being a bit sore he seems to have walked away from it all OK."
Three staff surveys also supported the policy, the service added.More than 1,500 responded to the service's CRMP consultation, carried out between August and November last year.
The majority of residents said they wanted crews to focus on building safety inspections, incident prevention and working with vulnerable residents.About a third called for more to be done to address the impact of climate change.Chief Fire Officer Rob Barber said the community was "at the heart of everything we do", and the service was taking steps to reduce its carbon footprint and ensure it was equipped to deal with the impacts of climate change.
Four-fifths of survey respondents also wanted firefighters to continue to transport discharged patients home from Royal Stoke Hospital and provide assistance following "non-injury" falls at home.In addition, the organisation outlined plans to put its employees first while developing a "diverse, healthy and highly professional workforce".
This includes investing in equipment and training, and community engagement to improve the diversity of its workers, according to the CRMP.
Two men have been charged with firearms offences after a gun was reportedly fired in Rotherham.But the timing of this breakthrough reflects a growing sense of urgency in international affairs, not least regarding Ukraine, with the UK keen to remove the Chagos issue as an obstacle to winning more global support, particularly from African nations, with the prospect of a second Trump presidency looming.
A backlash from some voices in the UK can be expected, even though successive Conservative and Labour prime ministers have been working towards the same broad goal.Tory leadership candidate Tom Tugendhat argued the deal had been "negotiated against Britain's interest" and it was "disgraceful" that such talks had begun under the previous Conservative government.
He called it a "shameful retreat" that leaves "allies exposed", while the former foreign secretary James Cleverly called it a "weak" deal.Human Rights Watch (HRW) said the deal will "address the wrongs against the Chagossians of the past but it looks like it will continue the crimes long into the future”.