
How Fire Code Deficiency Notifications Are Identified
Independent fire code compliance monitoring service
What Contractors Rarely See
Fire inspectors issue correction notices to businesses every week.
When a fire alarm, sprinkler, or life-safety system fails inspection, the business is given a limited time to correct it.
These notices are public records.
However, they are usually buried inside municipal portals, enforcement logs, or attached PDFs.
Most contractors only learn about the problem after the business starts calling around — often days or weeks later.
• Not advertising
• Not pay-per-lead
• Not a marketing agency
• We do not contact the business
• We do not represent the contractor
We only report publicly released inspection notices so the contractor can decide whether to act.
This Is Not
Source Examples

Municipal inspection record (public record)

Official violation notice issued to a business (redacted)
How Notifications Reach the Assigned Contractor

Typical Sequence After a Failed Fire Inspection
Notifications are sent after the deficiency is finalized so the business is aware repairs are required. Only verified deficiencies originating from publicly available municipal records. Source references are included with each notification. One contractor per territory.
What the Assigned Contractor Receives
Each alert is structured as a ready-to-act service opportunity including:
• Business name and address
• Business phone (when publicly listed)
• Inspection date
• Violation summary in plain English
• Compliance window (when available)
• Link or copy of the municipal record
If you are a service provider want to know whether a contractor is already assigned in your area, call or email.