Skip to content Skip to footer

Put Out 100 Fires by Year End 

When Firefighting Becomes a Quota 

Paul Cardinal describes one of the most absurd hypothetical goals imaginable: “Put out 100 fires by year end.” And while this might seem satirical at first glance, the deeper implications are alarmingly real. 

A goal like this satisfies every SMART requirement: 

  • Specific: 100 fires. 
  • Measurable: Easy to count. 
  • Achievable: Possibly—if there are enough fires. 
  • Resource-Driven: Needs crews and trucks. 
  • Time-Based: By the end of the year. 

But what happens when there aren’t enough fires? Do firefighters start rooting for disasters? Might the unthinkable—like arson—become a twisted means to achieve the metric? 

That’s the danger with blindly applied goals: they can lead to perverse incentives. Worse, firefighters might delay responding to real emergencies if it conflicts with other scheduled goals like vehicle inspections or training times. 

“Do you ignore a 9:50 AM alarm because you have a truck inspection goal at 10:00?” 

The point: Goals that ignore context lead to absurdity—and potentially tragedy.

Leave a comment