
After six years of waiting since the last major franchise event, the One Chicago 2025 crossover didn’t really deliver the high-octane thrills it seemed to promise. Its central building collapse meant several characters were stuck in place for three hours, but new details corroborated by the Chicago PD season 13 premiere suggest this year could see things unfold much differently.
Chicago Fire Season 14 Premiere Reveals 49% Of Emergency Calls Are Going Unanswered
The Police Don’t Even Respond To An Active Gang Shooting
Chicago Fire season 14 opens with a strong focus on criminal activity. The CPD shows up late after a mugging leads to a gas station fire, and they don’t show up at all when suspected gang members open fire on the 51. This leads Pascal to discover a secret report that 49% of Chicago emergency calls are currently being ignored.
Even Dwayne falls victim to a gunshot wound, setting up Darren Ritter’s Chicago Fire season 14 exit when he’s forced to reevaluate his feelings about commitment. But while this latter shooting takes place in New York, the new Chicago mayor’s office is aware of the issues plaguing their own city. In fact, it appears to have been an ongoing concern.
In response to budgetary concerns and overworked first responders, Chicago is cutting back on emergency services on a rolling schedule. They’ll almost always be short on Truck, Engine, or Squad, while remaining firefighting and rescue teams will have to cover more ground to accommodate other houses’ closures. And it’s not too hard to see where the worst-case scenario could lead.
A 2025-2026 One Chicago Crossover Could Involve Massive City-Wide Riots And Destruction
The City Has Already Been Experiencing An Uptick Of Homicides
While explaining why Kiana Cook left Chicago PD in season 13, Voight reveals that the Intelligence Unit still hasn’t been reinstated. This has led to a 9% increase in homicides and 22% rise in gun violence, the latter of which plays directly into the main conflict of Chicago PD’s season 13 premiere. Davis mentions this same uptick in Chicago Fire.
Voight’s conversation with IAD Commander Mark Devlin curiously doesn’t mention that nearly half of emergency calls aren’t receiving responses (more on that later), but the combination of rising crime rates and scaling back of firehouse staff could lead to widespread destruction if Chicago’s criminal element realizes they currently have the upper hand. It happened in another show just last season.
Previously, the biggest of all One Chicago crossovers was arguably 2014’s event comprising Chicago Fire, Law & Order: SVU, and Chicago PD. It was Dick Wolf’s first three-part franchise crossover, unfolding across two cities. But a 2026 One Chicago crossover could deliver non-stop suspense, with Gaffney overrun as Intelligence and the 51 race to save Chicago from widespread, catastrophic anarchy.
Why Chicago Fire Season 14’s Suggested One Chicago Crossover Can’t Happen Just Yet
There’s Likely A Reason Voight Didn’t Bring Up The Report
Voight’s conversation with Devlin about the Intelligence shutdown in Chicago PD omits that 49% of calls are going unanswered, which seems like a major talking point in favor of reinstating the unit. However, since Mayor Benning’s office is sitting on the report, the 51 are likely the only ones outside of the mayor’s office to know about the dispatch layoffs.
Chicagoans might have some vague awareness of a crime wave, but the incitement of riots justifying a 2026 One Chicago crossover’s stakes would hinge on the specific details of the report being leaked. In fact, Benning and Davis are likely sitting on the report specifically to prevent such chaos as might occur once criminals learn about the response time delays.
A 2026 One Chicago crossover hasn’t been announced at the time of writing, but groundwork will certainly be laid as Chicago Fire works to grapple with the fallout from the 911 firings. If the franchise follows this story all the way to its logical conclusion point, all three series’ casts should find themselves in greater collective danger than ever before.