When it comes to reporting to the National Fire Incident Reporting System, there are several myths floating around. As a trainer I hear them in almost every class. Find the truth behind common myths in this short presentation. Spread the truth afterwards! Note: there are some links specific to Kansas Fire Incident Reporting System. They may still be applicable but please defer to your state's guidelines.
3. "We only need to submit fire calls."
The Kansas Fire Service averages 4% of total call
loads as working fires.
Would you make accurate decisions affecting Public
Safety with 4% of the picture?
4. Instead of just fires....
Approach NFIRS with an "all-in" mentality.
Report everything you can to NFIRS. When you need
accurate numbers all your information will be in one
place.
6. "Only system mandatory fields matter."
Many important fields are not mandatory simply
because of the system's validation design.
Example: Apartment isn't mandatory because you
won't always be at an apartment. However, when you
are at an apartment, that information is important to
the address.
7. Instead of minimum effort....
Focus more on good reporting and less on
mandatory fields.
You'll get out of NFIRS what you put into it. Minimum
in? Minimum answers coming out.
9. "We can't get enough information."
It can be tough getting enough information from the
people on the call to complete a report.
Implementing a good field notes form can literally fix
the problem overnight, so long as personnel are
using it.
Click here for a great example of a Field Notes Form.
11. "Nobody cares if we don't submit."
Failing to report doesn't just affect your department.
Each department is a piece of the puzzle that
details the needs and services of the Fire Service.
If there are too many pieces missing nobody will
be able to tell what the picture is supposed to be.
It can also impact the amount of funding your area
receives.
12. "...but we didn't have any calls!"
Save the headache of letters and phone calls and
get familiar with the No Activity report. Submitted
monthly, it tells the system that you didn't have any
calls.
Each state may do No Activity differently so check in
with your State Program Manager.
14. "Reports can't be updated later."
Consider NFIRS reports as "living documents" that
you can update at any time.
You don't want to keep "undetermined" in a field if
you have the exact information. It looks bad and it
doesn't help the system. Do you want to go to court
with outdated info?
16. "Reporting don't help my department."
You can use NFIRS to determine call volume,
peak times, when you should schedule training,
what kind of training to give, if trucks are in the right
stations, Standards of Cover, trends, trouble areas,
funding proposals, grant proposals, city/county
reports to superiors, prevention measures,
equipment needs, comparisons, coverage,
performance review, community impact...
The list goes on.
17. "I still don't think it's worth it."
Fire departments who don't participate in NFIRS can
be ineligible to receive grant funding.
You can affect how much funding your city gets, your
county gets, your state, and yes even how much
funding the Federal government believes that fire
departments need.
You'll also miss out on points for your ISO rating.
19. "We can't afford software."
If you don't have software for completing reports
there is a perfectly capable, free software offered
by the USFA.
The software offers a downloaded version and an
online version. Contact your State Program
Manager to get you set up with a login and
password.
20. Want to see what the software
looks like?
Click here to see a manual for the Data Entry Tool. Note: this is
specific to Kansas but will still give you a good overview if you're
from a different state.
22. "This report is too old to submit."
Oops! You found a report that wasn't submitted.
Send it in, despite the date.
If you want to establish trends you need several
years of data. 5 years is good. 20 is better. There's
no such thing as an "old" report to a system like this.
24. "We are too small to matter in NFIRS."
Are you too small to need equipment? Are you too
small to need personnel? Why would you be too
small for representation?
Think of all the small departments you know. If you
all decided that you're too small to matter now
we're talking about a growing black hole of
information.
26. "A few bad reports are fine."
Imagine 1 in 10 reports are incorrect in your
department per year. If 10% of reports were
incorrect at the state level it could be 20,000+.
At the national level? Roughly 2,000,000.
That doesn't seem so fine.
27. Ignore the myths.
Focus on good reporting.
Your department will reap the benefits of good
data. You'll have strong statistics for proposals and
some serious insight into your department, all while
supporting the Fire Service everywhere.
28. and I would love to hear from you!
Sara Wood
Kansas NFIRS Program Manager
sara.wood@ksfm.ks.gov
HELLO
MY NAME IS
Sara...