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Guardian Life & Safety Solutions

"The credential that
makes the difference."

Deputy Fire Marshal
EMT Certified
BLS · CPR · First Aid
13 Yrs · City of Raleigh
Fire Watch Services

Fire Watch Coverage

Code-compliant fire watch for events and venues across North Carolina — continuous monitoring, required documentation, and immediate response capability, led by a certified Deputy Fire Marshal.

What Is Fire Watch?

Fire watch is a legally designated monitoring program required when a venue's normal fire suppression or detection systems are unavailable, impaired, or insufficient for the occupancy. The person conducting the fire watch — a qualified fire safety professional — continuously patrols the designated area, maintains a written log, and holds immediate response capability if a fire hazard is detected.

It is not a security patrol. It is not a general safety walk. Fire watch is a specific, code-defined function governed by NFPA 101, the International Fire Code, and the NC State Building Code. It must be performed by someone trained in fire hazard identification and response — not simply anyone available with a radio.

The Authority Having Jurisdiction — your local fire marshal's office — makes the final determination on whether fire watch is required for your event. When it is, the credential behind the person performing it matters. Learn more in the full NC Fire Watch Requirements Guide.

Common Triggers

Impaired Suppression System

Sprinkler or suppression system out of service for any reason — maintenance, malfunction, or renovation — during a period of occupancy.

Temporary Structures

Large tents, temporary stages, or pavilions without built-in fire suppression, particularly when occupancy thresholds apply.

Hot Work On-site

Welding, cutting, or open-flame work in or around the event footprint — common in production and fabrication.

AHJ Requirement

The local fire marshal or Authority Having Jurisdiction specifically requires fire watch as a condition of your event permit.

Led by a Certified Deputy Fire Marshal

Most event medical companies cannot provide fire watch. The credentials are different — and most providers simply don't have them.

13
Years as Deputy
Fire Marshal

TC Caldwell — Deputy Fire Marshal, City of Raleigh

TC Caldwell has served as a Deputy Fire Marshal with the City of Raleigh for over 13 years. That credential — not just a certification, but an active, practiced role in fire prevention and code enforcement — is what makes Guardian's fire watch service legitimate. TC understands the codes that govern fire watch requirements, the documentation standards the AHJ expects, and the response protocols that distinguish a proper fire watch from someone walking laps with a flashlight.

Because TC is also an active, credentialed EMT, Guardian is one of the only providers in North Carolina that can cover both fire watch and event medical coverage under a single, coordinated team.

What Our Fire Watch Service Covers

Every Guardian fire watch engagement includes the following as standard.

Continuous Patrol
The fire watch professional actively circulates the designated area on a defined schedule — not stationed at a fixed post. Patrol routes and timing are documented throughout.
Written Patrol Log
Every patrol is documented with time, areas covered, and observations — a legal requirement and your protection if questions arise after the event. Guardian provides complete records.
Communication Readiness
Direct contact with venue operations maintained throughout. Immediate escalation path to 911 is always in place — no gap in the communication chain.
Immediate Response Capability
If a fire condition is detected, the fire watch professional initiates evacuation procedures, contacts the fire department, and takes initial response steps within their trained scope.
Pre-Event Coordination
Venue walkthrough, suppression system status review, and coordination with venue operations before the event opens — not day-of improvisation.
Combined Medical Option
Fire watch can be integrated with Guardian's full event medical coverage — one team, one coordination process, one point of contact for both requirements.

Events & Venues That Require Fire Watch

Fire watch is more common at events than most organizers expect. These are the situations where it comes up most frequently.

Event Venues Under Renovation

Any venue with temporarily disabled or impaired suppression during ongoing construction or maintenance — including partial system shutdowns.

Outdoor Festivals & Tents

Large tent structures, pavilions, and outdoor festival footprints that lack built-in suppression and meet occupancy thresholds.

Production & Concert Events

Events involving pyrotechnics, hot work, or production equipment with open-flame risk during setup, show, or strike.

Warehouses & Non-Standard Venues

Temporary event spaces in warehouses, industrial buildings, or other venues where suppression coverage is partial or absent.

Permit-Required Situations

Any event where the AHJ has specifically conditioned the event permit on a fire watch — common for large public gatherings in Raleigh and Wake County.

Corporate & Private Events

Private events in venues with older suppression systems, limited coverage, or non-standard configurations where fire watch is a prudent precaution.

The Fire Watch Process

Fire watch coverage starts well before your event opens. Here's how Guardian handles it from first contact through post-event documentation.

01
Initial Consultation

We discuss your venue, event type, suppression system status, and any AHJ requirements you've received. If you're unsure whether fire watch is required, we'll help you work through it.

02
Venue Walkthrough

We walk the space before the event — reviewing suppression status, identifying the patrol route, and confirming communications with your venue contact and operations team.

03
Coverage & Patrol

Fire watch begins before occupancy and continues for the required duration. Active patrol, written log documentation, and continuous communication readiness throughout.

04
Post-Event Documentation

You receive the complete patrol log and any incident documentation. This is your legal record of a compliant fire watch — important for your permit history and insurance.

Fire Watch FAQs

Can a security guard perform a fire watch?
No. A fire watch must be performed by someone trained in fire hazard identification, applicable fire codes, patrol documentation requirements, and emergency response procedures. Guardian's fire watch is led by TC Caldwell, a certified Deputy Fire Marshal — the specific credential that matters here.
How much notice do I need to arrange a fire watch?
At least 30 days is recommended. If your venue has a known suppression impairment, involves large temporary structures, or your permit has already been conditioned on fire watch, contact us as soon as possible. We accommodate shorter timelines when we can, but earlier is always better.
Does every event need a fire watch?
Not automatically. Fire watch is required under specific conditions — impaired suppression, temporary structures, elevated occupancy, hot work, or AHJ requirement. If you're unsure whether your event triggers it, contact your local fire marshal's office. They will tell you definitively. You can also read the full NC Fire Watch Requirements Guide for detailed code references.
What documentation is required for a fire watch?
A written patrol log is legally required — documenting the time of each patrol, areas covered, and any conditions observed. This is not optional. Guardian provides complete documentation as part of every engagement, and you receive copies as your record of compliance.
Is fire watch the same as a fire safety inspection?
No. A fire watch is continuous active monitoring during occupancy when suppression is unavailable or impaired — an ongoing protective measure. A fire safety inspection is a periodic code compliance review conducted by the AHJ. They serve entirely different functions, and one does not substitute for the other. Read more: Fire Watch 101.
Can I get fire watch and medical coverage from the same provider?
Yes — and Guardian is one of the very few event coverage providers in North Carolina that can deliver both. TC Caldwell holds both a Deputy Fire Marshal credential and an active EMT certification, so a single Guardian engagement covers both requirements under one coordinated team, one pre-event process, and one point of contact.

Need Certified Fire Watch
for Your Event?

Tell us about your venue and event. We'll confirm what's required and get code-compliant coverage in place — led by a Deputy Fire Marshal with 13+ years on the line in Raleigh.