By David Gambino
The Decatur Daily
DECATUR, Ala. 鈥 Decatur Fire & Rescue鈥檚 EMS coordinator issued a $5,000 fine and proposed a five-point penalty for Decatur Morgan Hospital EMS ambulance services for failing to meet the city鈥檚 required response times in the police jurisdiction between July and September.
The Ambulance Regulatory Board (ARB) will vote on the penalty assessed by Chris Phillips, Decatur Fire & Rescue medical services coordinator, at a Dec. 10 meeting.
The ambulance service responded to 19 of 24, or 79%, of its mid- to high-priority calls in the police jurisdiction within 13 minutes during this year鈥檚 third quarter, failing to meet the required 90%. The police jurisdiction is a 1 1/2-mile area outside the city limits where Decatur provides fire and police protection and enforces building codes.
During the same time frame, the ambulance service responded to 292 of 323, or 90%, of its mid- to high-priority calls in the city within nine minutes, exactly meeting the requirements of the ambulance ordinance.
The service responded to 316 of 327, or 97%, of lower priority calls in the city within nine minutes, with one of those calls 鈥渞olled鈥 to an outside service. One hundred percent, or 14 of 14, lower priority calls in the police jurisdiction were responded to within 13 minutes.
鈥淎 lot of it has been a staffing issue for us,鈥 said Tyler Stinson, the Decatur Morgan Hospital ambulance service director, at Tuesday鈥檚 ARB meeting. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not a local issue, that鈥檚 a national issue.
鈥淲e took over the county on July 1, and we鈥檝e been short in both of our operations since then. There鈥檚 a light at the end of that tunnel. We had six employees finish paramedic school in August. ... We鈥檝e had four or five more that have finished advanced EMT class this last month.鈥
In October, Decatur Fire responded to 303 of 315, or 96%, of in-city 鈥渉ot鈥 calls 鈥 those with lights and sirens 鈥 within nine minutes, according to Phillips. One hundred percent, or 13 of 13, police jurisdiction hot calls were responded to within 13 minutes.
There were 1,316 total EMS calls in October, down from 1,330 in September and 1,536 in August.
鈥淭here were three calls that were rolled to outside agencies,鈥 Phillips said. 鈥淭hat would not be the county ambulance鈥檚 calls, that would be like HEMSI, Athens, Cullman, etc.鈥
Phillips said the penalty for Decatur Morgan EMS was issued Tuesday morning. The board upheld a similar penalty for the ambulance service for failing to meet the 13-minute response time in the police jurisdiction during the last quarter of 2022 and the second quarter of 2024, according to Assistant City Attorney Chip Alexander.
The penalties for the ambulance service are in a two-year rolling window. A service would face a possible loss of its operating license if penalized as much as 26 points within the two-year window.
If the ARB upholds the penalty, the ambulance service can appeal the decision to the City Council.
Decatur Morgan Hospital has been the city鈥檚 sole ambulance provider since First Response Ambulance Service closed its Decatur operations in March 2022.
Decatur Fire Chief Tracy Thornton said despite October鈥檚 rolled calls, the ambulance service didn鈥檛 have to roll any calls during the previous three months.
鈥淒ecatur Morgan has been doing a great job,鈥 Thornton said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e proud to be partnered with them to try to provide EMS service for the city of Decatur. Their goal and Decatur Fire鈥檚 goal is to provide the best patient care we can for the citizens, and we work for that every day.鈥
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