Reducing Time-on-Task: How Fire Chiefs Can Reclaim Hours Without Adding Staff

A person in firefighting gear uses a touchscreen tablet, focusing on the device with their finger.

Fire chiefs everywhere are facing the same equation:

More calls. Same resources. Less time.

Call volume continues to rise—driven by expanded EMS responsibilities, increased reliance on fire departments for non‑traditional services such as community health, and growing community expectations. At the same time, budgets and staffing remain flat. In many municipalities, fire services are last in line for funding after police, utilities, and other essential services.

The outcome is clear: departments are being asked to do more work with the same number of people.

 

The Real Pressure Isn’t Calls—It’s Time-on-Task

When fire leaders talk about operational strain, the issue isn’t just incident volume. It’s time compression, often expressed as unit hour utilization.

A firefighter’s shift is already segmented:

  • Rig and equipment checks
  • Training and drills
  • Inspections and prevention work
  • Meals and station responsibilities
  • Administrative and reporting tasks
  • Emergency calls

As call volume increases, every other task gets squeezed. There’s less margin. Less flexibility. Less recovery time.

That’s why many chiefs are no longer asking, “How many calls are we running?”

They’re asking, “How much time does each required task take?”

 

Why Time-on-Task Matters

Time-on-task gives fire leaders a way to talk about efficiency without framing the problem as underfunding or understaffing. It shifts the focus to:

  • Where time is being lost
  • How long required work actually takes
  • How existing systems either help—or hurt—operational efficiency

 

Documentation Is One of the Largest, Most Controllable Variables

Documentation is unavoidable. But how long it takes is often a byproduct of the system in place.

Many fire reporting systems rely on standardized run forms designed to cover every possible scenario. Crews are required to work through long forms filled with questions that may not apply to the call they just ran. That adds friction, increases cognitive load, and stretches reporting time longer than it needs to be.

For chiefs, that means:

  • More administrative time per incident
  • Less flexibility across the shift
  • Higher risk of burnout over time

 

How ImageTrend Elite™ Fire Helps Reduce Time-on-Task

Elite Fire RMS software approaches documentation differently—starting with outcomes, not features.

BestinClass Run Forms
ImageTrend’s library includes preconfigured, best‑practice run forms that departments can use immediately. Chiefs don’t have to start from scratch or accept a one‑size‑fits‑all structure.

Configurability That Works for You
Elite Fire allows departments to configure run forms so they reflect local workflows, incident types, and reporting priorities. Crews see fewer irrelevant questions, which shortens the time it takes to complete each report.

Preset Values for Common Scenarios
For routine incidents—such as canceled calls or false alarms—preset values can automatically populate most of the report with a single tap. Validation can reach near‑completion instantly, allowing crews to save and finalize with minimal effort.

Consistent Data Without Extra Burden
Reducing time does not mean sacrificing compliance or data quality. In fact, configured workflows often produce more consistent and reliable data, because required elements are handled in the background instead of through repetitive manual entry.

 

Reclaiming Hours Across the Department

Shaving minutes off a single report may not sound significant—until it’s multiplied across:

  • Every call
  • Every crew
  • Every shift
  • Every year

Those reclaimed hours create space for:

  • Training and readiness
  • Prevention and inspection work
  • Reduced administrative pressure
  • Lower long‑term burnout risk

Most importantly, they give chiefs more control over how limited time is used—without asking for more staff or more budget.

 

Time-on-Task Is a Leadership Lever

Fire departments can’t control call volume. They often can’t control staffing levels. But they can control how much time required work takes.

For many departments, reducing time on task—starting with documentation—is one of the most realistic ways to relieve pressure, improve efficiency, and better support crews. That’s where Elite Fire fits in.

If your department is evaluating how time is spent today—and where it can be reclaimed tomorrow—this is a conversation worth having. Start the conversation with one of our software experts.

 

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