ITM Service Agreements
Chasing multiple contractors for ITM reports, compliance certificates, and deficiency closeouts is its own part-time job โ and the gaps between them are where liability hides. We put every fire protection system in your building under one annual contract: one schedule, one report, one invoice for your sprinkler, alarm, extinguishers, doors, lighting, hoses, and more.
What it is
Managing fire protection compliance across multiple systems โ sprinkler, fire alarm, extinguishers, fire doors, emergency lighting, hoses โ requires coordinating separate contractor schedules, chasing separate reports, reconciling separate invoices, and hoping nothing falls through the gaps between vendors. Zion ITM service agreements replace that with a single point of contact for every code-required inspection on your building. One agreement, one annual schedule, one deficiency dashboard, one invoice per period.
An ITM service agreement is Zion's mechanism for shifting you from reactive compliance management (calling vendors when the AHJ asks for paperwork) to proactive compliance management (arriving at every AHJ inspection or insurance renewal with current documentation already in hand). Agreements are available at three tiers โ Standard, Plus, and Comprehensive โ and are customized based on which systems are in your building and whether you manage a single property or a portfolio.
The service agreement includes the scheduled inspections required by code. It does not include repair labor and materials โ those are quoted separately when deficiencies are found. However, service agreement customers receive priority scheduling for deficiency repairs, and repairs are priced at service-agreement rates, not street rates. For facilities with complex deficiency histories, many customers find that the repair savings alone justify the agreement premium over individual annual inspection pricing.
What code governs it
Multiple NFPA standards โ 25, 72, 10, 80, 101, 1962, 204 โ governed by applicable Texas code adoptions under TAC Title 28 โ A service agreement ensures all code-mandated ITM intervals are scheduled and documented; the agreement itself does not modify code requirements
Texas adoption: TAC Title 28 Chapters 34 (alarm), 35 (extinguishers), and 36 (sprinkler) establish ITM obligations. Compliance documentation must be maintained by the building owner and made available to the SFMO or AHJ on request.
International Fire Code reference: IFC ยง901.6 requires ITM of all fire protection systems per applicable NFPA standards. Service agreement documentation satisfies the record-retention requirements of ยง901.6.2.
Required inspection & test frequency
What is included by service agreement tier. Items marked as 'Included' are covered at no additional charge in that tier. Items marked 'At discount' are available at service-agreement rates when needed.
| Activity | Frequency | Code reference |
|---|---|---|
| Sprinkler ITM (NFPA 25 annual) | Standard / Plus / Comprehensive โ Included | NFPA 25 ยง13 |
| Fire alarm ITM (NFPA 72 annual) | Standard / Plus / Comprehensive โ Included | NFPA 72 Ch. 14 |
| Fire extinguisher inspection (NFPA 10 annual) | Standard / Plus / Comprehensive โ Included | NFPA 10 ยง7.3 |
| Fire door inspection (NFPA 80 annual) | Plus / Comprehensive โ Included | NFPA 80 ยง5.2 |
| Emergency & exit lighting test (NFPA 101 annual) | Plus / Comprehensive โ Included | NFPA 101 ยง7.9 |
| Fire hose inspection (NFPA 1962 annual) | Comprehensive โ Included; others at discount | NFPA 1962 ยง5.1 |
| Backflow preventer test (annual) | Comprehensive โ Included; others at discount | AWWA M14 / TCEQ |
| Priority deficiency repair scheduling | All tiers โ within 5 business days | โ |
| After-hours emergency response | All tiers โ 855.ZIONFIRE 24/7 | โ |
| Deficiency dashboard access (customer portal) | All tiers โ real-time | โ |
| Certificate of insurance (COI) issuance | All tiers โ same business day on request | โ |
| AHJ submission assistance | Plus / Comprehensive โ Included | โ |
What you'll receive from Zion
Every visit ends with documentation your AHJ and insurance carrier will accept on the first review:
- Annual ITM calendar at agreement start showing every scheduled visit date for every system at every building in scope
- Same-day inspection reports for every visit, posted to customer portal and emailed to designated contacts
- Consolidated deficiency dashboard โ real-time view of all open deficiencies across all systems and locations, with status tracking through repair completion
- Single annual invoice per building (or per portfolio on multi-site agreements) with line-item breakdown by system
- Certificate of Insurance (COI) issuable same business day on request โ pre-formatted for lender, insurance carrier, and property management chain requirements
- Annual compliance summary letter suitable for executive reporting, board documentation, or lender review
- Dedicated account manager โ one person who knows your buildings, your AHJ relationships, and your deficiency history
Common deficiencies we find
If you're inheriting a building or evaluating an incumbent service provider, these are the issues we see most often โ and what they cost to fix when found before an AHJ visit:
- Facility managers maintaining separate relationships with 4โ6 ITM vendors who don't talk to each other, resulting in systems with overlapping inspections and others with none
- Inspection reports stored in email rather than a centralized system โ when the AHJ asks for 3 years of fire alarm inspection history, the search takes days
- Deficiency repairs falling through the gap between the inspection contractor and a separate repair contractor โ deficiency is documented but no one is assigned to fix it
- No documented escalation path for after-hours emergencies โ building staff call the general office number at 2 AM for a system trouble alarm and get voicemail
- COI requests taking days because the contractor's certificate holder information has changed and no one updated the building's records
- Service intervals missed when buildings change management companies โ new management company doesn't inherit the ITM schedule, and 14 months pass between inspections
- No consolidated view of deficiency status across a multi-property portfolio โ property manager doesn't know which buildings have open deficiencies heading into an insurance renewal
Why Zion for this work
Single licensed contractor for everything
Zion holds TX SFM ACR (alarm), SCR (sprinkler), and ECR (extinguisher) licenses. One company, one agreement covers every system โ no coordination gaps between vendors, no finger-pointing when a deficiency spans two systems.
Real-time deficiency dashboard
The Zion customer portal gives you a live view of every open deficiency across every building, with status (identified, quoted, scheduled, repaired, closed). If your insurance carrier or AHJ asks what's open, you know the answer before they do.
Same-day COI issuance
When a lender, tenant, or insurance carrier asks for a certificate of insurance, we issue it same business day. We keep your designated certificate holder list current and pre-format COIs for the most common requestor types in Texas commercial real estate.
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between Standard, Plus, and Comprehensive tiers?
Standard covers the three highest-frequency compliance systems: sprinkler ITM (NFPA 25), fire alarm ITM (NFPA 72), and fire extinguisher inspection (NFPA 10). Most buildings in Texas need at least these three. Plus adds fire door inspection (NFPA 80) and emergency/exit lighting testing (NFPA 101). Comprehensive adds fire hose inspection, backflow preventer testing, and includes AHJ submission assistance. All tiers include the customer portal, 24/7 emergency response, same-day COI, and priority repair scheduling.
Does the service agreement include repair costs?
No. The service agreement covers the required inspection and testing visits. When deficiencies are found, Zion provides a fixed-price repair quote. Service agreement customers receive priority scheduling (repairs within 5 business days) and service-agreement pricing, which is typically 10โ20% below our standard repair rates. Emergency repairs (critical deficiencies requiring immediate action) are dispatched same-day for all agreement customers.
We manage 15 properties in DFW. Can one agreement cover all of them?
Yes. Multi-site portfolio agreements are Zion's most common agreement structure for property management companies. You receive one consolidated deficiency dashboard, one invoice per billing period, and portfolio-level compliance reporting. Each building's inspection schedule and documentation are maintained separately. Contact us with your property list for a portfolio quote.
What happens if we miss a scheduled inspection date?
We don't miss โ we do the scheduling. Zion schedules all visits, confirms with your contact 30 days in advance, and dispatches on schedule. If building access or a conflicting event requires rescheduling, we reschedule within the same compliance month to preserve your inspection interval record. You are notified of any rescheduling with the new date and confirmation.
What does 'after-hours support' mean in practice?
855.ZIONFIRE (855-946-6347) reaches Zion dispatch 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. After-hours calls route to a Zion technician, not an answering service. For service agreement customers, after-hours calls for system failures, impairment notifications, and fire watch requests receive priority dispatch. After-hours work is billed at the applicable after-hours labor rate โ there is no additional fee structure beyond the normal rate for emergency response.
Can we add a system to the agreement mid-year if we have a renovation that adds fire doors?
Yes. Service agreements can be amended mid-term to add systems or additional buildings. We'll pro-rate the new system cost for the remainder of the agreement year and schedule the initial inspection. For renovation projects, we recommend contacting Zion before the work is complete so we can perform a post-installation inspection concurrent with the general contractor's punch-list โ which often identifies issues before the AHJ's certificate-of-occupancy inspection.