Station Draft for NERIS Coordinators
Confidence flags give you systematic visibility into where officer narratives consistently under-populate required NERIS fields. That's actionable data for training, not just a compliance gap.
What NERIS Coordinators Are Managing
You Can't Review Every Report Manually
As NERIS coordinator, you're responsible for schema coverage accuracy across every incident type your department runs. Manual review at volume isn't feasible. You need systematic signals, not spot checks.
Schema Coverage Gaps Are Hard to Identify
When officers consistently miss the same NERIS fields, you don't see the pattern until audit time. By then, months of incident records have the same gap. Early visibility requires data you don't currently have.
Adoption Pace Varies by Officer
Some officers adapt to NERIS quickly. Others struggle with specific modules or terminology. Without field-level data on where confusion concentrates, training is generic rather than targeted.
Confidence Flags as Adoption Signals
Every Station Draft field carries one of three confidence levels. As a NERIS coordinator, the distribution of flags across drafts tells you where your officers need support.
High — Narrative Supported
Officers are including this information in their narratives. Field is correctly populated.
Review — Inferred, Needs Check
Officers mention this contextually but not directly. Station Draft inferred a value. Officer must verify.
Missing — Not in Narrative
Officers consistently omit this information. This is your training gap — the field the narrative never contains.
How Station Draft Supports NERIS Adoption
Confidence Flags as Adoption Signal
When Station Draft consistently flags a specific field as "Missing" across multiple officers' drafts, that's a training gap — not an individual error. You're seeing systematic narrative behavior, not isolated mistakes.
NERIS Schema Coverage by Module
Station Draft maps every narrative to the applicable NERIS module — Fire, EMS, HazMat, or Other — and populates fields according to Minimum Essential Information requirements. Coverage gaps are explicit, not hidden.
Structured Data You Can Use
Draft output is structured, not free-text. That means field-by-field export that maps directly to your RMS and NERIS schema. Structured data is auditable data.
Systematic NERIS Coverage Starts With the Narrative
Join the pilot and surface the adoption gaps in your department's incident reporting.