Initiating and leading change in nonprofit, philanthropic and government settings.

Latest Columns

To Boost the City’s Recovery, Get ‘Learning Leaders’ Back in School

March 29, 2022

For State’s Future, The Governor Must Say No Sometimes

January 26, 2022

A better deal for retirees and NYC: But the city made two mistakes with its Medicare Advantage Plus plan

October 25, 2021

Who Decides How Public Money Is Spent?

October 15, 2021

The lame duck and the hatchling: How to run the transition between Bill de Blasio and his successor

July 5, 2021

Mayoral Candidates Flunk First Budget Test

March 5, 2021

Upending East Midtown’s progress: Gov. Cuomo’s new plans are threatening the office district’s growth

February 16, 2021

A Trumpian Push to Overturn the Will of New York City Voters

December 30, 2020

‘Hanging On’ is Not a Management Strategy

December 2, 2020

Letter to the Editor: The Assembly Member’s Bad Bank Note

September 28, 2020

Mayor Must Bridge Budget Gap Without Borrowing or Mass Layoffs

August 26, 2020

Now More Than Ever, New York City Needs Leaders to Welcome Jobs

August 11, 2020

Learning the Right Health-Care Lessons from the Covid Crisis

June 18, 2020

Keep Subways Closed Overnight to Expedite System Modernization

May 26, 2020

How to Craft the Bare Bones State Budget New York Needs

March 30, 2020

Lessons from 9/11: A Needed Piece of the Coronavirus Recovery Plan

March 26, 2020

The Governor’s Dilemma: Gimmicks or Gumption

March 9, 2020

Ruling Endangers Better Planning for City’s Future

March 9, 2020

Worrisome City Budget Update Buried by Holiday and State Woes

March 9, 2020

A Well-Meaning But Misguided Housing Proposal

March 9, 2020

Counting Votes So They Really Count

March 9, 2020

Attorney General Disrupts Progress on Taxi Loan Crisis

February 28, 2020

The Mayor’s Savings Mirage

February 4, 2020

Racing to the Scene of the Wrong Emergency

September 30, 2019

The Mayor’s Missing Pen

September 12, 2019

The Small Business ‘Crisis’ That Isn’t

August 22, 2019

A Chore We Must Do: Over-Hauling Private Waste Management in New York City

August 1, 2019

A French Lesson in Fare Evasion

July 16, 2019

Governor Gets What He Wants at the MTA; Now It’s Time to Deliver

June 25, 2019

The Fading Promise of Property Tax Reform

June 12, 2019

Taxi Medallion Exposé Drives Home Key Budget Lesson

May 29, 2019

‘Blow Up the MTA’? Not Yet

May 17, 2019

A Lion of City Government Issues a Warning

May 1, 2019

City Council Fire Department Proposals Don’t Match Need for Reform

April 17, 2019

Doing Good Things Badly: Congestion Pricing and MTA Reforms

April 3, 2019

Charter Revision Commission Needs a Hippocratic Oath

March 18, 2019

Ending The School Aid Charade

March 4, 2019

Latest Columns

Categories

Subscribe!

Racing to the Scene of the Wrong Emergency

By Carol Kellermann | September 30, 2019
maybdb greet
(photo: Demetrius Freeman/Mayoral Photography Office)

The New York Times recently published a two-column editorial advocating that the city’s emergency medical technicians (EMTs) and paramedics be paid close to or as much as its firefighters. Far easier for the Times to virtue-posture by supporting more pay for hard-working, largely of color EMTs than to address how the increased expense should be funded or how to remedy the astonishing imbalance in resources devoted to firefighting versus to emergency medical response.

The editorial speaks movingly about the importance and stresses of emergency medical service work, but simply notes blithely two remarkable problems. First, the salary increases would mean dramatically raising base pay after five years on the job, from about $50,000 for EMTs and $65,000 for paramedics to the $85,000 base pay of firefighters, at a cost of half-a-billion dollars a year. Second, the reason the job of EMTs and paramedics has become so important and challenging is that the vast majority of emergency calls in New York City are now not about fires, but medical needs.

More than 80% of emergency incident calls to 911 in New York City – almost 1.5 million out of a total of 1.9 million calls a year – are medical, not fire-related. Yet there are only 4,300 EMTs and paramedics employed by the FDNY. In contrast, there are 11,000 firefighters to respond to 40,000 fires a year, only about 2,000 of which are deemed serious structural fires. A relatively small percentage of medical emergency calls are handled by private ambulances, but the contrast between medical and fire calls handled by FDNY is still dramatic.

Medical emergencies have far outnumbered fires since the Emergency Medical Service merged into the FDNY in 1996. New and renovated buildings are now generally well-fireproofed due to strong building codes and improved technology has cut down on the number of false alarms. Meanwhile the aging and growth of the city’s population, the drug addiction crisis, and other factors have led to a dramatic rise in the need for emergency medical response.

The number of medical incidents to which the FDNY responds is 25 times that of fire-related incidents and more than 38 times that of structural fires, yet more than 70% of the FDNY budget and two-thirds of its personnel are devoted to staffing fire units.

Firefighters assigned to engine (as opposed to ladder) companies must receive training as Certified First Responders with Defibrillation (CFR-D) and these companies are dispatched to respond to some medical emergencies. They can often arrive more quickly than an ambulance staffed by EMTs and/or paramedics, but CFR-D firefighters are not able to transport patients to a hospital, or administer intravenous or medication or other types of medical intervention, so in most cases (70% require transport), an ambulance must also respond and take over. The deployment of engine companies, each staffed by four or five firefighters and an officer, thus gives the firefighters more “runs” but they are mostly redundant and extremely expensive. 

There is a great deal of emphasis in public discussion of emergency medical services on response time, i.e. how long it takes for a fire truck or ambulance to arrive on the scene of a call. While the average response time for both ambulances and fire engines has risen a few seconds over recent years, the vast majority of calls are for situations that are not life-threatening and for which response time is not a critical issue.

Deployment of more staff and ambulances that can respond more promptly to the most serious incidents would be more efficient and effective. The increased costs could be offset by reducing the number of fire engines and ladders, which are no longer necessary given the reduced level of firefighting—but an effort to right size firefighting resources is regarded as politically untenable because no one ever wants to lose a firehouse nearby, regardless of how busy it is.

Another approach, adopted successfully in Houston, would be to require firefighters to receive EMS and/or paramedical training so that fire engines can provide the full range of services needed for medical calls, including transport.

But again, the obstacles are primarily political – firefighters would resist the additional training requirements and the unions representing EMTs and paramedics would howl at further erosion in their numbers (many already leave to take advantage of the priority they are given to become firefighters). 

Although FDNY recognizes the need to reconfigure the department, it has not made significant efforts to do so. In 2016 it instituted a pilot program in the Bronx of using “fly cars,” SUVs staffed by EMT supervisors and paramedics, to respond to life-threatening incidents along with an ambulance and instead of fire engines. It reduced response times by more than one minute. It has been announced that this program will be expanded in October but no details have been provided. 

Instead of talking about the difficult but necessary steps to provide more and better ambulance service to New York City residents, the Times and elected officials – many of whom just rallied with EMTs on the steps of City Hall – are choosing the easy message that makes no one unhappy but solves very little: pay more to the stressed and stretched EMTs and paramedics but ignore the serious underlying structural problems that will continue to plague the city’s emergency response system in the absence of an honest discussion and real leadership.

This post was originally published by Gotham Gazette on September 30, 2019.