One of the features that makes InTime particularly useful for law enforcement is that it considers all of the union rules and unit readiness rules the agency must follow, regarding officer hours and fatigue, officer qualifications, and overtime, when assigning shifts.
For example, if an officer wishes to switch shifts with another officer, the software determines if the two officers have the requisite qualifications based on the ranks and skills needed to cover the shift’s responsibilities while ensuring compliance with fatigue and overtime rules. Supervisors receive notification if the shift switch raises red flags, and the supervisor has final approval. All parties are notified about the supervisor’s decision over their phones, usually by SMS text or InTime’s Mobile App notifications. “If you get a shift switch wrong, it can jeopardize the agency and the community,” Warburton says.
When schedules and assignments do change, InTime lets agencies send that information to their employees immediately. “Scheduling can change every day,” Warburton says. “People are off training, people take bereavement leave, or they get sick, or go on vacation, so being able to deploy changes and communicate them to everyone on staff simultaneously is very important.”
InTime also tracks overtime assignments and expenditures. Its analytic features let agencies know if all the overtime is being assigned to too few officers. The software also codes overtime spending so that schedulers can track the reason for the extra hours. Warburton says it facilitates reducing the total number of overtime hours by helping schedulers see the exact number necessary to meet agency
responsibilities.
“We’ve seen scenarios where they only needed a half day of overtime from an officer when they were assigning a full day. That can add up,” Warburton explains, adding, “Agencies that use InTime have told us they have been able to cut their overtime costs by as much as 30%.”