thegreypilgrim
Forum Asst. Chief
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It is becoming apparent that EMS represents a tremendous cost to local communities - both in terms of user-fees and in consuming significant portions of government budgets in the form of public safety funding. The civil grand jury report published by the County of Santa Clara last year makes a strong case for this.
It is also because of local funding that there is a tremendous disparity in service availability and quality across jurisdictions. Obviously places like Independence, CA is not going to be able to afford a remotely similar level of service as Los Angeles. It is not difficult to find analogues throughout the nation.
Given these problems, I think it is clear that what must happen is the states will have to completely take over EMS operations. Doing so would come at a significant cost, but these will be offset by overall savings to the tax base as a whole and could impact national health expenditures by insulating the costs of ambulance service.
Take King County Medic One as an illustrative example. The citizens of King County pay $0.30 per $1000 of assessed property value per year. The county government began collecting this levy in 2007 and has never exceeded the $0.30/$1000 rate. The levy completely funds Medic One's operations and the residents of King County are not charged a fee for ambulance service there. In the 5 years it has been in operation it has generated over $600 million despite the fact that the typical resident of King County probably only paid around $85/year for Medic One services (according to NAR data the median home price in the Seattle-Tacoma-Bellvue metro area was $285,000).
Imagine if this program expanded to include the entire population of Washington. You could provide a robust, professional level of service to the entire geographic area at a much lower cost to each individual person. I don't see why this model couldn't be reproduced in each of the other 50 states.
It is also because of local funding that there is a tremendous disparity in service availability and quality across jurisdictions. Obviously places like Independence, CA is not going to be able to afford a remotely similar level of service as Los Angeles. It is not difficult to find analogues throughout the nation.
Given these problems, I think it is clear that what must happen is the states will have to completely take over EMS operations. Doing so would come at a significant cost, but these will be offset by overall savings to the tax base as a whole and could impact national health expenditures by insulating the costs of ambulance service.
Take King County Medic One as an illustrative example. The citizens of King County pay $0.30 per $1000 of assessed property value per year. The county government began collecting this levy in 2007 and has never exceeded the $0.30/$1000 rate. The levy completely funds Medic One's operations and the residents of King County are not charged a fee for ambulance service there. In the 5 years it has been in operation it has generated over $600 million despite the fact that the typical resident of King County probably only paid around $85/year for Medic One services (according to NAR data the median home price in the Seattle-Tacoma-Bellvue metro area was $285,000).
Imagine if this program expanded to include the entire population of Washington. You could provide a robust, professional level of service to the entire geographic area at a much lower cost to each individual person. I don't see why this model couldn't be reproduced in each of the other 50 states.