CHART 01
Call Type Distribution
Breakdown of all emergency call categories
Medical Incidents dominate overwhelmingly, accounting for the majority of all logged calls. This confirms the modern reality: fire departments today function primarily as emergency medical responders, with structural fires representing a fraction of total workload. Structure Fires and Alarms together form the next largest segment, while Vehicle Fires, Outside Fires, and Smoke Investigations represent tail-end categories. This distribution has direct staffing implications โ ALS (Advanced Life Support) unit allocation should reflect this medical-centric demand curve.
โMedical calls
โStructure fires
CHART 02
Avg Delay by Priority
Mean response delay per original priority level
Counterintuitively, Priority 1 calls โ the most urgent โ show the longest average delays. This is partly driven by extreme outliers: one Priority 3 Medical Incident logged a 77.33 min delay, and a Priority 1 call reached 18.07 min. While Priority 2 sits in the middle, the pattern suggests that dispatch triage may not reliably correlate with actual field response speed. Outliers skew means significantly โ resource bottlenecks, unit availability, and geographic clustering all likely contribute to this paradox.
โP1 avg min
โP3 avg min
CHART 03
ALS vs Non-ALS Delays
Average response delay split by ALS dispatch status
ALS-dispatched calls consistently show higher average delays than non-ALS calls โ not because ALS units are slower, but because they're deployed to more complex, time-sensitive incidents that inherently involve more coordination overhead. ALS resources are finite: when multiple critical incidents coincide, unit availability becomes the binding constraint. This finding argues for strategic pre-positioning of ALS units in high-density call zones (B02, B03, B04) and closer monitoring of simultaneous ALS dispatch events.
โALS avg delay
โNon-ALS avg delay
CHART 04
Calls by Battalion
Volume of calls handled per battalion unit
Call volume is unevenly distributed across battalions, with B03, B04, and B10 handling the highest loads on this date. B03 covers the dense downtown/SoMa corridor โ its elevated count reflects high population density and concentrated medical demand. B08 stands out due to the 1500 Block of 25th Ave Structure Fire, which alone generated 12 dispatched units. This multi-unit clustering effect can temporarily overwhelm a single battalion's resources, creating response gaps for concurrent calls in adjacent zones.
โBusiest battalion