As for the maintenance and upkeep of firefighting equipment afterward, it primarily falls upon the neighborhood office, residents' committee, and property management to be specifically responsible for inspections. If problems arise and are not rectified, one can seek penalties from the joint firefighting police station, but the responsibility for maintenance inspections cannot be entirely thrown on the shoulders of the fire department.
The squadron has to manage police dispatches and training; how few people are there in a firefighting regiment agency?
To constantly monitor tens of thousands of high-rise buildings and tens of thousands of firefighting equipment and products in your jurisdiction without issues would run you ragged, and you'd still be overwhelmed with work.
The fire department can only conduct spot checks; these spot checks actually test the quality of local fire safety overseers. The detailed work must still be done on the local level.