Commissioner Sounds Alarm On EMS

Would anyone be able to send that article to me? I get the headline and then it wants a subscription. If you can, I thank you in advance.
 

Harry Siegel: Fire commish sounds alarm: EMS about to collapse​


By Harry Siegel | harrysiegel@gmail.com
PUBLISHED: March 1, 2025 at 5:00 PM EST

Much like a nagging health condition — gasping while climbing flights of train stairs that didn’t used to feel like a challenge at all — can one day become an urgent problem, the Emergency Medical Service workers who’d respond if you had a heart attack are facing their own crisis call.
New FDNY Commissioner Robert Tucker has been publicly sounding an alarm about how the nation’s largest public pre-hospital care agency — one that’s been part of the city’s Fire Department since 1996 — is in “critical condition” now as it’s been “overlooked and under supported” while responding to a record 1.6 million calls last year.

“When I tell people I don’t sleep at night, this is why,” Tucker said in a speech last month. “Our EMS system has operated on an unsustainable model for years, and without immediate attention and proper investment it could soon collapse.”

There’s no one cause of or fix for that unsustainable model as emergency personnel unions try to negotiate a new contract while continuing to work under the terms of one that expired in 2022 at the same time they’re pursuing a class-action lawsuit against the city.

It’s a physically and emotionally taxing job that joins the intensity of working as a first responder with the draining set-up of a taxi driver — if your driver also performed CPR before carrying you from your walk-up apartment into their cab, and with no hope of collecting a tip for that effort.

The job comes with a limited number of use-them-or-lose-them sick days, a big pay disparity with other uniformed service workers, a culture that’s nearly as isolated as a firehouse is intimate and a rapidly churning workforce mostly there because it’s a four-year backdoor to becoming a firefighter.

I followed up after that speech with Tucker, who’d run a private security firm and also served on the FDNY Foundation Board before Mayor Adams brought him on in August as the department’s 35th commissioner and who says he wants to bring a CEO’s mentality to his public position.
In a phone conversation on Thursday, he elaborated about “what’s been sort of the tale of two cities” inside the FDNY between fire operations and EMS operations: “They’ve never adequately been merged. They wear the same patch, but they hardly operate under anywhere near the same conditions,” Tucker said, adding that EMS members “still do a phenomenal job despite the setup.”

The commissioner was frank about the problems facing EMS, including longer response times — “you only have to look in the Bronx to where I think it’s a challenge to get an ambulance”without pretending to have the full solution to what he called “the biggest public safety crisis that nobody’s talking about in New York City”: “it starts with the recruits — you know what their motivation is to be there — because it’s very hard to manage a workforce that’s essentially a four-year workforce. You know from the moment they get there, they’re focused on leaving.”
He continued: “The next thousand people in probation on the fire operations side are going to come from EMS. I only recruited 300 to replace them. If that doesn’t sound an alarm…”

The EMS workers who are there, he said, “essentially come to work when they want to, because they make so little that it doesn’t really move the needle to show up or not show up. By the time you really drill this thing down, I don’t know who set it up but I gotta tell you we need to reset it.”
To do that, “My number one goal is to improve the quality of EMS from A to Z: the morale, the culture, the equipment, the training. It all needs a good, hard look.”

That’s “nice to hear” from the new commissioner, said Anthony Almojera, a 21-year veteran of the EMS service and a vice president of its officers’ union.

But, Almojera continued, that won’t solve problems a mayor needs to address at the bargaining table to fix what Almojera described as an increasingly miserable job.

“This is happening to the citizens of New York. That’s not hyperbole,” he said. “People are dying because of the inexperienced and underfunded resources we have, including the personnel. The chickens came home to roost.”

Tucker, for his part, concluded our conversation by saying that “I need everyone to realize the start of fixing something is pointing out there’s a problem.”

Harry Siegel (harrysiegel@gmail.com) is an editor at The City, a host of the FAQ NYC podcast and a columnist for the Daily News.
 
The FDNY/EMS is a mongrel dog who sadly will never be best in show.

Everyone knows that with municipal fire departments, EMS is the tail that wags the dog. For example, at 0630 this morning (shift change), the Houston Fire Department had 37 active incidents in progress; 36 EMS calls and one apartment fire.

Who wants an overworked, underpaid person who really wants a different job taking care of a loved one when the chips are down?

A quick suggestion: Eliminate EMTs and firefighters as new hires. Bring on ONLY EMT/firefighters. Within two years, all members of the uniformed force (including the COD) will be at least EMTs.

United States Supreme Court members have to be attorneys. In the US Navy, Federal law mandates that the Captain of an aircraft carrier has to be a naval aviator. It doesn't seem unreasonable to require all Chief Officers (including the COD) to be licensed Paramedics.
 

Harry Siegel: Fire commish sounds alarm: EMS about to collapse​


By Harry Siegel | harrysiegel@gmail.com
PUBLISHED: March 1, 2025 at 5:00 PM EST

Much like a nagging health condition — gasping while climbing flights of train stairs that didn’t used to feel like a challenge at all — can one day become an urgent problem, the Emergency Medical Service workers who’d respond if you had a heart attack are facing their own crisis call.
New FDNY Commissioner Robert Tucker has been publicly sounding an alarm about how the nation’s largest public pre-hospital care agency — one that’s been part of the city’s Fire Department since 1996 — is in “critical condition” now as it’s been “overlooked and under supported” while responding to a record 1.6 million calls last year.

“When I tell people I don’t sleep at night, this is why,” Tucker said in a speech last month. “Our EMS system has operated on an unsustainable model for years, and without immediate attention and proper investment it could soon collapse.”

There’s no one cause of or fix for that unsustainable model as emergency personnel unions try to negotiate a new contract while continuing to work under the terms of one that expired in 2022 at the same time they’re pursuing a class-action lawsuit against the city.

It’s a physically and emotionally taxing job that joins the intensity of working as a first responder with the draining set-up of a taxi driver — if your driver also performed CPR before carrying you from your walk-up apartment into their cab, and with no hope of collecting a tip for that effort.

The job comes with a limited number of use-them-or-lose-them sick days, a big pay disparity with other uniformed service workers, a culture that’s nearly as isolated as a firehouse is intimate and a rapidly churning workforce mostly there because it’s a four-year backdoor to becoming a firefighter.

I followed up after that speech with Tucker, who’d run a private security firm and also served on the FDNY Foundation Board before Mayor Adams brought him on in August as the department’s 35th commissioner and who says he wants to bring a CEO’s mentality to his public position.
In a phone conversation on Thursday, he elaborated about “what’s been sort of the tale of two cities” inside the FDNY between fire operations and EMS operations: “They’ve never adequately been merged. They wear the same patch, but they hardly operate under anywhere near the same conditions,” Tucker said, adding that EMS members “still do a phenomenal job despite the setup.”

The commissioner was frank about the problems facing EMS, including longer response times — “you only have to look in the Bronx to where I think it’s a challenge to get an ambulance”without pretending to have the full solution to what he called “the biggest public safety crisis that nobody’s talking about in New York City”: “it starts with the recruits — you know what their motivation is to be there — because it’s very hard to manage a workforce that’s essentially a four-year workforce. You know from the moment they get there, they’re focused on leaving.”
He continued: “The next thousand people in probation on the fire operations side are going to come from EMS. I only recruited 300 to replace them. If that doesn’t sound an alarm…”

The EMS workers who are there, he said, “essentially come to work when they want to, because they make so little that it doesn’t really move the needle to show up or not show up. By the time you really drill this thing down, I don’t know who set it up but I gotta tell you we need to reset it.”
To do that, “My number one goal is to improve the quality of EMS from A to Z: the morale, the culture, the equipment, the training. It all needs a good, hard look.”

That’s “nice to hear” from the new commissioner, said Anthony Almojera, a 21-year veteran of the EMS service and a vice president of its officers’ union.

But, Almojera continued, that won’t solve problems a mayor needs to address at the bargaining table to fix what Almojera described as an increasingly miserable job.

“This is happening to the citizens of New York. That’s not hyperbole,” he said. “People are dying because of the inexperienced and underfunded resources we have, including the personnel. The chickens came home to roost.”

Tucker, for his part, concluded our conversation by saying that “I need everyone to realize the start of fixing something is pointing out there’s a problem.”

Harry Siegel (harrysiegel@gmail.com) is an editor at The City, a host of the FAQ NYC podcast and a columnist for the Daily News.
Just submit Chicago in place of New York. Several ambulances are doing 8000 runs yearly.
 
The FDNY/EMS is a mongrel dog who sadly will never be best in show.

Everyone knows that with municipal fire departments, EMS is the tail that wags the dog. For example, at 0630 this morning (shift change), the Houston Fire Department had 37 active incidents in progress; 36 EMS calls and one apartment fire.

Who wants an overworked, underpaid person who really wants a different job taking care of a loved one when the chips are down?

A quick suggestion: Eliminate EMTs and firefighters as new hires. Bring on ONLY EMT/firefighters. Within two years, all members of the uniformed force (including the COD) will be at least EMTs.

United States Supreme Court members have to be attorneys. In the US Navy, Federal law mandates that the Captain of an aircraft carrier has to be a naval aviator. It doesn't seem unreasonable to require all Chief Officers (including the COD) to be licensed Paramedics.

F.Y.I., Justices of the Supreme Court do not have to be lawyers.
 
The FDNY/EMS is a mongrel dog who sadly will never be best in show.

Everyone knows that with municipal fire departments, EMS is the tail that wags the dog. For example, at 0630 this morning (shift change), the Houston Fire Department had 37 active incidents in progress; 36 EMS calls and one apartment fire.

Who wants an overworked, underpaid person who really wants a different job taking care of a loved one when the chips are down?

A quick suggestion: Eliminate EMTs and firefighters as new hires. Bring on ONLY EMT/firefighters. Within two years, all members of the uniformed force (including the COD) will be at least EMTs.

United States Supreme Court members have to be attorneys. In the US Navy, Federal law mandates that the Captain of an aircraft carrier has to be a naval aviator. It doesn't seem unreasonable to require all Chief Officers (including the COD) to be licensed Paramedics.
Chief officers are expected to perform budgetary, personnel management, capital purchasing, political and organizational tasks that are not learned at academies or by occupational experience. Not using a licensed paramedic for patient care is a mis-allocation of relevant talent, training and experience as is promoting people into job functions that they have not been adequately prepared for.
 
The FDNY/EMS is a mongrel dog who sadly will never be best in show.

Everyone knows that with municipal fire departments, EMS is the tail that wags the dog. For example, at 0630 this morning (shift change), the Houston Fire Department had 37 active incidents in progress; 36 EMS calls and one apartment fire.

Who wants an overworked, underpaid person who really wants a different job taking care of a loved one when the chips are down?

A quick suggestion: Eliminate EMTs and firefighters as new hires. Bring on ONLY EMT/firefighters. Within two years, all members of the uniformed force (including the COD) will be at least EMTs.

United States Supreme Court members have to be attorneys. In the US Navy, Federal law mandates that the Captain of an aircraft carrier has to be a naval aviator. It doesn't seem unreasonable to require all Chief Officers (including the COD) to be licensed Paramedics.
Nor do aircraft carrier COs have to be aviators
 
Chief officers are expected to perform budgetary, personnel management, capital purchasing, political and organizational tasks that are not learned at academies or by occupational experience. Not using a licensed paramedic for patient care is a mis-allocation of relevant talent, training and experience as is promoting people into job functions that they have not been adequately prepared for.
Yes and no but reasonably accurate statement.
 
Ironically (@Elmerj, can correct me), but I don't believe the Chief of EMS even has to be a paramedic.
You would be correct, If a Chief Officer in EMS happened to be EMT certified and not a Paramedic although they are few and far in between they would be able to serve in the Chief of EMS position if the Fire Commissioner so desired. The last 5 Chiefs of EMS in the FDNY were all paramedics. The Chief of EMS during and for a period of time right after the merge in 1996 was neither an EMT nor Paramedic but an Assistant Chief Fire Officer.
 
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