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I Just Got Red Tagged by the Fire Marshal. What Do I Do Now?

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I Just Got Red Tagged by the Fire Marshal. What Do I Do Now?

The local fire inspector just walked out the door and left a bright red tag on your fire system. Your stomach drops. You are now facing potential daily fines, a canceled insurance policy, or even a forced shutdown of your business if the issue is not resolved immediately. Panic is the natural reaction, but making hasty decisions will only make the situation worse. Take a deep breath. Before you touch anything, here is your emergency guide to understanding exactly what a red tag means, what your legal timeline looks like, and how to get your property back into full compliance safely and legally.

What to Do Right Now

  • Do Not Remove the Tag: It is a criminal offense to remove, cover, or alter a red tag placed by an inspector or a licensed fire protection contractor. Only a certified professional can legally remove it once the repair is complete.

  • Read the Notice of Violation: The tag itself or the accompanying paperwork (often called a Notice of Violation or NOV) will state exactly what is wrong. Locate the specific code citation and the deadline for repairs.

  • Check for Fire Watch Requirements: If your primary fire alarm or sprinkler system is completely disabled, the local Authority Having Jurisdiction (the Fire Marshal or local fire department) may require you to implement a continuous "Fire Watch." This means hiring dedicated personnel to physically patrol the building 24/7 looking for fire hazards until the system is fixed.

  • Notify Your Insurance Carrier: Many commercial property insurance policies require immediate notification if life safety systems are impaired. Failing to report a red tag could void your coverage if a fire occurs.

What Does It Actually Mean?

In the fire protection industry, a red tag means your equipment has a critical impairment. In simple terms, the system will absolutely not function as designed in the event of an emergency. Here are the most common reasons business owners receive this severe penalty.

Complete System Failure

The Hazard: The mechanical or electrical components of your fire protection system have completely broken down. 

The Cause: This happens when an alarm panel has a catastrophic motherboard failure, a fire pump seizes, or an underground water main supplying your sprinkler system breaks. 

The Consequence: If a fire breaks out, the system cannot detect the smoke, notify the occupants, or suppress the flames. The building is entirely unprotected.

Critical Code Violations

The Hazard: The physical layout of your business no longer matches what your fire system was designed to protect. 

The Cause: You may have moved a commercial deep fryer out from under its designated suppression hood, or a new tenant built floor-to-ceiling walls that block the existing sprinkler heads. 

The Consequence: The fire suppression agents are no longer aimed at the correct hazards. Even if the system activates perfectly, it will completely miss the fire.

Tampering or Extreme Damage

The Hazard: Vital components of the system have been physically compromised by human error or vandalism. 

The Cause: Common examples include painters spraying over the delicate glass bulbs on sprinkler heads, warehouse forklifts crushing exposed pipes, or employees completely discharging fire extinguishers and hanging them back on the wall empty. 

The Consequence: The physical damage prevents the release of water or chemical suppressants, rendering the specific device completely useless during an emergency.

⚠️ LIABILITY WARNING: Ignoring a red tag leaves building ownership fully liable for any property damage, injuries, or loss of life that occurs on the premises. The Authority Having Jurisdiction has the legal right to close your doors, revoke your certificate of occupancy, and levy massive daily fines until a licensed contractor repairs the impairment.

Red Tags vs. Yellow Tags: Understanding the Difference

It is important to know that not all inspection tags mean your business is shutting down. The color of the tag dictates the severity of the problem.

  • Yellow Tags: A yellow tag indicates a non-critical deficiency. The system will still work in a fire, but it is not up to current maintenance standards. Examples include a fire extinguisher missing its annual inspection sticker or a sprinkler system with slightly corroded pipes that are not yet leaking. You still need to fix these issues, but they are not immediate life safety threats.

  • Red Tags: A red tag indicates an emergency impairment. The system is dead, empty, or fatally flawed. This requires immediate, emergency service.

The Hedrick Fix: Clearing Your Violation Legally

Getting a red tag removed is not a DIY project. The local fire department requires a licensed, certified fire protection contractor to perform the work and submit the proper documentation.

When you call Hedrick Fire Protection, our emergency service technicians diagnose the mechanical failure or code violation. We then perform the necessary repairs, and once the system is fully operational and tested, we legally remove the red tag and submit the compliance paperwork directly to your local Fire Marshal, clearing your violation and keeping your doors open.

Do not wait for the city to shut down your operations. Contact the team at Hedrick Fire Protection today, and we will dispatch a certified technician to resolve your red tag immediately.

Call today (877) 570-3473
Hedrick Fire Protection is trained to sell, repair and maintain products form the following brands:
Trained and licensed to service Amerex products Trained to service Ansul Trained to service Buckeye Fire Equipment products Licensed for Pyro-Chem installations