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ACT Fire and Rescue facing $8 million annual overtime bill due to understaffing

Mounting pressures on the service reveal a sustainability challenge that will require either workforce expansion or structural reform to maintain round-the-clock coverage without exhausting staff.

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By The Daily Canberra · Published 26 June 2026, 7:36 pm

2 min read

Updated 4 h ago· 12 July 2026, 11:20 am

AI-assisted · human-reviewed where required

AI may assist with research, summarising and drafting. Where public source links underpin the article, they are shown below. Sensitive material is held for human review, and people oversee the standards and corrections process. The Daily Canberra covers Canberra news. It is provided for general information only and is not professional, legal, financial, or medical advice. Read our editorial standards →

ACT Fire and Rescue facing $8 million annual overtime bill due to understaffing
Photo by Matt C on Unsplash

ACT Fire and Rescue is spending almost $700,000 on overtime each month, totalling more than $8 million annually, due to understaffing across the service, according to The Riot Act. The figure was confirmed by Fire and Emergency Services Minister Dr Marisa Paterson in a recent answer to a question on notice, revealing the operational strain of maintaining 24-hour coverage across the territory.

The overtime burden reflects a wider challenge facing ACT emergency services: population growth and geographic spread have outpaced staffing levels, forcing existing crews to work extended hours to fill gaps. For firefighters and paramedics, sustained overtime raises fatigue-related safety risks and contributes to staff retention problems. For the government and taxpayers, the cost is significant and growing, effectively funding a workforce shortfall through penalty rates rather than addressing root causes.

There are positive signs the pressures will ease, according to the minister, though specific timelines and recruitment plans remain unclear. In the meantime, the $8 million annual tab underscores the fiscal implications of under-resourcing frontline services. As Canberra's population approaches 470,000 and continues to expand, questions persist about whether emergency service budgets are growing proportionally or whether similar pressures are building elsewhere across the ACT public sector.

Sources: the-riotact.com.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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Published by The Daily Canberra

Covering federal in Canberra. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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