Fire Watch Security in Alberta Under Alberta’s Fire Code Section 2.8.3.1, a fire watch is not a precaution — it is a legal obligation. The moment your fire alarm system, sprinkler system, or suppression system goes offline — for any reason, including planned maintenance — the obligation begins immediately. There is no grace period. There is no ‘a few hours should be fine.’ Failing to comply can void your property insurance, expose you to fines up to $100,000 under the Safety Codes Act, and — in the event of a fire — create personal criminal liability.
This guide is for building owners, facility managers, contractors, and property managers in Edmonton and Calgary who need to understand the legal and financial consequences of non-compliant fire watch security — not just what the service is.
The Law: What Section 2.8.3.1 of the Alberta Fire Code Requires
The Alberta Fire Code — adopted from the National Fire Code of Canada with provincial amendments — requires the following under Section 2.8.3.1:
- When any required fire protection system is taken out of service for any reason, the owner or operator must immediately implement compensatory measures
- Compensatory measures typically mean: deploying a dedicated, trained fire watch guard to continuously monitor all affected areas
- The fire watch must begin the moment the system goes offline — not when you finish your morning coffee and realize the issue
- Patrol logs must be maintained and made available to the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) on request at any time
Who Is the AHJ in Alberta?
- Edmonton: Edmonton Fire Rescue Services — they have authority to inspect, issue orders, and impose penalties
- Calgary: Calgary Fire Department — same authority as Edmonton Fire Rescue
- Other Alberta municipalities: the local fire authority for that jurisdiction, or the Safety Codes Council for unincorporated areas
What Actually Happens When You Skip Fire Watch Security in Alberta
Scenario 1: Your Alarm Panel Goes Offline for a Sprinkler Repair
You have a commercial building in Edmonton. Your sprinkler contractor says they need to shut down the Zone 3 sprinkler loop for 6 hours to replace a faulty valve. You figure it is one afternoon, no big deal. You do not arrange fire watch security.
What can happen:
- If an Edmonton Fire Rescue Services inspector visits the property during those 6 hours and finds no fire watch in place: immediate compliance order, possible stop-work order, and a formal AHJ citation
- If a fire starts during those 6 hours in Zone 3: your insurance company reviews the claim and discovers the zone was offline with no fire watch security — the claim is denied under the ‘wilful neglect’ or ‘failure to mitigate’ clauses in most commercial property policies
- If a person is injured in that fire: you as the building owner face personal civil liability that your insurance will not cover
Scenario 2: Hot Work on a Construction Site Without Fire Watch Security
A subcontractor on your Edmonton job site is welding on the third floor. They finish at 3pm and pack up. The foreman does not arrange fire watch because ‘the welding is done.’ At 5pm, a smouldering fire in the wall cavity from a weld spark ignites. The site has no overnight staff. The fire spreads. When NFPA 241 standards and the Alberta Fire Code both require a fire watch guard to remain on site for 30–60 minutes after hot work concludes, this is not a grey area. The liability falls on the prime contractor.
Scenario 3: Fire Alarm Panel Replaced During Business Hours (Office Building)
A Calgary office building is replacing its fire alarm panel. The contractor takes the panel offline from 9am to 3pm. No fire watch is arranged because ‘people are in the building during the day.’ However, the people in the building are not trained fire watch personnel — they are office workers. They do not conduct required 30-minute patrols. They do not maintain a patrol log. If Calgary Fire Department inspects and finds no compliant fire watch, the building owner faces a formal compliance order.
The Financial Consequences — What It Actually Costs
| Consequence | Potential Cost |
|---|---|
| AHJ compliance order fine (Safety Codes Act Alberta) | $100 to $100,000 per violation — based on severity and duration of non-compliance |
| Stop-work order on construction project | $5,000 to $50,000+ per day in project delay costs |
| Insurance claim denial (fire during non-compliant period) | 100% of claim value — you bear the full loss |
| Civil liability if a person is injured | Unlimited — personal or corporate liability for medical costs, lost income, pain and suffering |
| Criminal liability (if death or serious injury results) | Potential charges under the Criminal Code of Canada for criminal negligence causing bodily harm |
| West Guards fire watch guard (4-hour minimum deployment) | $120 – $170 — the cost of four hours of compliant fire watch coverage |
What a Compliant Fire Watch Security Looks Like Under Alberta Law
Not everyone who calls themselves a fire watch security guard meets Alberta’s legal requirements. A compliant fire watch under Section 2.8.3.1 must:
- Be a person dedicated solely to fire watch duties for the entire impairment period — not a janitor, maintenance worker, or general security guard who has other tasks
- Conduct patrol sweeps of all impaired areas at intervals not exceeding 30 minutes (or more frequently as directed by the AHJ)
- Be equipped with: a means to contact emergency services (phone), a portable fire extinguisher appropriate to the hazard, and a written patrol log book
- Document every patrol with the exact time, areas covered, and any observations — the log must be available for AHJ inspection at any time
- Know the building layout, exit locations, and emergency procedures specific to that site
West Guards Security’s fire watch security services in Edmonton and Calgary deploy guards who meet all of the above requirements. Every West Guards fire watch deployment includes site-specific briefing, a patrol log maintained to AHJ inspection standards, and a shift report delivered to you at the end of every watch period.
How Quickly Can West Guards Deploy a Fire Watch Guard in Edmonton?
West Guards Security maintains an on-call fire watch security team available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year across Edmonton and Calgary. Our standard deployment timeline:
- Emergency call received: our dispatch team confirms guard availability and site details
- Within 4 hours: guard deployed to site in Edmonton or Calgary for emergency requests
- Guard arrives briefed: site-specific emergency contacts, patrol log format, and impaired zone identification completed before first patrol begins
For construction clients requiring both construction site security and fire watch during hot work periods, West Guards can provide a single guard performing both functions under one contract — eliminating the cost and complexity of managing two separate providers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is fire watch required for residential buildings in Alberta, not just commercial?
A: Yes. Alberta’s Fire Code applies to all occupancy types including residential apartment buildings and condominiums. Any impairment to a fire alarm or suppression system triggers fire watch requirements regardless of whether the building is residential or commercial.
Q: Can I use my own building maintenance staff as a fire watch services ?
A: The Alberta Fire Code does not specifically prohibit using trained building staff, but the person must be dedicated solely to fire watch duties for the duration of the impairment — they cannot perform other maintenance tasks simultaneously. In practice, most legal and insurance advisors recommend using dedicated professional fire watch guards to ensure the standard is met and documented correctly.
Q: Does the fire watch obligation begin immediately when the system goes offline?
A: Yes. There is no grace period under Section 2.8.3.1. The obligation begins the moment the fire protection system is taken out of service. Even if the anticipated repair time is only 2 hours, a compliant fire watch must be in place from the start of the impairment period.
Q: What if my insurance company never asks about fire watch security?
A: An insurance company typically discovers fire watch non-compliance during claim investigation, not routine policy review. By the time they discover it, a fire has already occurred. The question to ask is not whether your insurer will find out — it is whether you want to take the risk that they will.
Q: Can West Guards provide fire watch for a building outside Edmonton or Calgary?
A: Yes. West Guards Security provides fire watch services across Alberta. For locations outside Edmonton and Calgary, deployment times may be longer — contact us with your location and required start time for a specific response time commitment.





