Performance warehouse
Performance MeasureMeasure #100717840Value #104322130

FIRE DISPATCHED CALLS

Number of incidents dispatched to Portland Fire & Rescue units

A complete source packet for this Performance Portland measure: current value, official scale, history, narrative notes, context, and links.

1

Start with value

Use the latest official value and current trend as the first read.

2

Check why it matters

Call volume directly affects the quality of service provided by Portland Fire & Rescue (PF&R) because there are a limited number of crews available to respond to emergencies.

3

Use the source packet

Continue to the chart, official notes, topic links, source URLs, and full history table.

History

Official values

This chart uses the official actual values cached from ClearImpact. The latest point is highlighted; the table below preserves every raw row.

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Latest

89,422

FY 2024 - 25

First shown

81,076

FY 2015 - 16

Change shown

8,346

Within visible history

-11,045.517,488.746,02374,557.3103,091.5FY 1681,076FY 17FY 18FY 19FY 20FY 21FY 22FY 23FY 24FY 2589,422X-axis: reporting period. Y-axis: official actual value.

Full source history

Every cached ClearImpact row for this measure.

PeriodActualTargetTrend
FY 2024 - 2589,422-1
FY 2023 - 2492,0461
FY 2022 - 2388,7611
FY 2021 - 2284,218-1
FY 2020 - 2185,8671
FY 2019 - 2083,025-1
FY 2018 - 1985,628-1
FY 2017 - 1887,1661
FY 2016 - 1785,6981
FY 2015 - 1681,0760

Narrative Tabs

Official Performance Portland notes

Why Is This Important?

Call volume directly affects the quality of service provided by Portland Fire & Rescue (PF&R) because there are a limited number of crews available to respond to emergencies. When a crew is dispatched to an incident, it is unavailable for other calls. If another emergency occurs in the same area while crews are already on a call, units from other Fire Management Areas must respond, leading to longer response times and potentially worse outcomes for fire and medical emergencies. Tracking the number of incidents helps the City make informed decisions about adding resources or adjusting dispatch protocols to prioritize the most critical calls. These decisions impact PF&R’s ability to meet national response standards set by the National Fire Protection Association’s Standard 1710.

What Do The Numbers Show?

The number of incidents has generally increased each year, with PF&R making adjustments to manage calls more efficiently with the same resources. To maintain response times for high-priority calls, PF&R has developed programs to send other types of responders to lower-acuity calls. For example, the Community Health Assess and Treat (CHAT) program was created to handle low-acuity medical calls and connect individuals with additional healthcare resources. This program not only reduces the demand on fire and emergency response resources but also helps decrease non-emergent visits to Emergency Departments. Calls involving homeless individuals have contributed to growth in several call categories, including fires, medical, and service calls. To address this, PF&R collaborates with Portland Street Response (PSR) and other providers to ensure the most appropriate resources are deployed or to connect individuals with follow-up care after PF&R’s initial response.

How Did We Arrive at These Numbers?

Every incident is logged in the PF&R records management system along with information on what was relayed through dispatchers, what units were sent, and what was found at the scene. PF&R counts all calls with a dispatch code assigned by the Bureau of Emergency Communications (9-1-1 call center) and a time of dispatch for at least one PF&R unit.

Where Can I Find More Information?

Information about call counts, available resources, and other statistics can be found on the PF&R Annual Performance Reports webpage.