You might work for a private if.....

johnrsemt

Forum Deputy Chief
1,678
263
83
you were a great partner; I hope I had some little part in helping you be a great medic.

Yes that was the person with no arms and very little legs; so in one way it was worth getting off late, just to deal with that patient. But glad it was your patient.
 

crazycajun

Forum Captain
416
0
0
You flag down an ALS county 911 unit, open the back doors and tell them here, YOU TAKE HIM!!!
 

b2dragun

Forum Crew Member
99
0
0
You get sent on a call 10 posts away...then get asked for an ETA.

You spend more time driving to post moves then actual calls

Your rig isn't back from the day crew but dispatch keeps paging you to ask why you aren't 10-8.

You don't have a machine to do compressions for you.

You volunteer to come in and get put in the worst truck in the fleet...just to see all the brand new ones parked in the lot.

You have been towed in more then once in a shift...and you know every tow guys name...and they tell you which trucks to avoid.

The 6 month shift bid happens every 8-9 months

The company buys new rigs but puts old boxes on them.

Your child seats are from the 80's

Your uniform makes you look more like a security guard than an EMT

Way more to list but I'm running late for my shift
 

TransportJockey

Forum Chief
8,623
1,675
113
Remounting is actually pretty common and saves a bunch of money for services. Even third service agencies use remounts
 

TransportJockey

Forum Chief
8,623
1,675
113
Every box at my last FD job was a remount.

I thought some FDs used at least some remounts, but wasn't sure. I used third services because most I know use remounts to some extent
 

usalsfyre

You have my stapler
4,319
108
63
I thought some FDs used at least some remounts, but wasn't sure. I used third services because most I know use remounts to some extent

Fraizer boxes dang near last forever. You couldn't tell they were remounts in any way, shape or form.
 

johnrsemt

Forum Deputy Chief
1,678
263
83
It is 2 hours before the start of your shift; and you are being threatened with firing because you won't mark enroute on the emergency run they have toned you out to 3 times.

you mark in service from the run, out of service enroute back to area (from 2 states away) by phone. and Dispatch tells you they have an emergency run holding for you. AND writes you up when you tell them that it will be 6 hour ETA.

When you get the the Hospital 3 hours from base for transport back to your city, and find out that the patient is going to a hospital with the same name as the one in your city, but 2 states away. Done that more than I care to remember, but always is nice OT.
 

Aerin-Sol

Forum Captain
298
0
0
There are new employees to meet every two weeks.
You don't know your supervisor's name.
You're aware of several lawsuits pending against the company for labor issues.
You have a bariatric stretcher, but no bari truck.
You have "find the expired items" scavenger hunts at the start of every shift.
Your coworkers have visible tattoos/facial piercings.
You get off at 2300 & dispatch doesn't understand why you don't want to pick up at 0500.
When the only in-service your company has ever offered is on how to do paperwork in a way that Medicare will be guaranteed to pay for the run.
Your QA consists of explaining how to re-write a narrative so Medicare will pay for the run.
When anytime you hear the phrase "it is X minutes/hours away," you assume the person is maliciously lying, including outside of work.
 

TransportJockey

Forum Chief
8,623
1,675
113
There are new employees to meet every two weeks.
Your coworkers have visible tattoos/facial piercings.

The first one is standard at my service :p I've been there three months and I'm an 'old timer'...

As for the second... What does that have to do about private service. I worked for a municipal 911 service in TX and had visible tattoos, and my private 911 service a good percentage of us have visible tattoos
 

gillysaurus

Forum Lieutenant
123
0
0
As for the second... What does that have to do about private service. I worked for a municipal 911 service in TX and had visible tattoos, and my private 911 service a good percentage of us have visible tattoos

Quoted for truth! I don't work for a private survice anymore (yeehaw), and more than half of the folks at my non-private service now have many visible tattoos/piercings. We're required to cover, but the cops aren't. They wear them loud and proud, and I'm pretty sure they're not privatized! ;)
 

46Young

Level 25 EMS Wizard
3,063
90
48
You're eligible for food stamps

You and your partner have one month's experience between the both of you

You have to constantly chase them to get your hours right, and then actually get them to pay you

You've ever been stiffed by the company after having paid out of pocket for tolls on a call (no EZ Pass)

Get 1-2 hour (or more) late jobs every day, but can't get any OT shifts because they want to save money by running down trucks

Your orientation and precepting timeframe is a total of three days or less

The hourly rate they quoted you verbally at the interview (get it in writing!) is higher than what they're actually paying you

They tell you that you're hired as a FT or PT employee, until you ask when your medical benefits kick in, or about sick days/vacation days, then they tell you that you're per diem

You have to call dispatch and request permission to go L/S to the hospital w/ a pt

Whenever they're not on a call, almost every employee takes off their uniform shirt so everyone can see their cool volunteer FD shirt that they have underneath

Yor partner is doing detective work every time to find out why you're going on that call instead of other units - for example, where the other units are, how many calls the other units ran today, if the crew is sleeping with one of the dispatchers and are getting a break, the 1800 hrs truck should be inservice, why aren't they getting it, etc. They're calling dispatch, asking other road units what they did so far today, so on and so forth.

Your partner's a medic and has never once boarded and collared a pt, and probably doesn't know how to

If you have a cascade system to replenish your O2

If the company reorganizes and/or changes names every couple of years for various legal reasons

If your partner has ever attempted to "get air" while driving the bus over a hump or hill

There's no deferred comp in place, six days or less of sick time or vacation time every year

If you get less than time and a half when you work on a holiday

If your FT schedule is three 12's a week w/ no additional shifts to get to 40 hours, to save on OT costs

If you've got one year on the job and you're already burned out
 

dmc2007

Forum Captain
257
1
16
You know the location of every dialysis clinic in your metropolitan area.

Your supervisor has advised you to "punch the console" in order to ensure the lights are functioning properly.

The individual that hired you is no longer working for the company when you start.
 

Aerin-Sol

Forum Captain
298
0
0
Yor partner is doing detective work every time to find out why you're going on that call instead of other units - for example, where the other units are, how many calls the other units ran today, if the crew is sleeping with one of the dispatchers and are getting a break, the 1800 hrs truck should be inservice, why aren't they getting it, etc. They're calling dispatch, asking other road units what they did so far today, so on and so forth.

Bwahahaha. So true!
 

Meursault

Organic Mechanic
759
35
28
  • You end up performing minor repairs on your equipment at least once a week.
    I tell people I bought my Leatherman mostly to screw parts back onto the truck. Another crew came back and requested two equipment seals and an opinion on whether opening the tool kit and having a cop hit a malfunctioning part with a hammer was appropriate.​
  • You've ever been in a truck older than your partner.
  • Most of the dispatchers used to work in the field, "until...", and no one will finish that sentence.
  • Some of the supervisors and training personnel used to work in the field until...
 
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EMTswag

Forum Crew Member
49
0
0
when dispatch sending you to post in the middle of the ghetto at 0200 isnt a big deal
 

Tigger

Dodges Pucks
Community Leader
7,853
2,808
113
when dispatch sending you to post in the middle of the ghetto at 0200 isnt a big deal

And you're the only overnight truck on for your company and could have been posted at literally anywhere else in the metro area.



You can't plan next week until friday when the new schedule comes out since you never, ever work the same shift twice.

If you're "scheduler" does not look at the previous weeks schedule meaning that you have six hours off between your shift on saturday and the overnight on starting at 000 on sunday.

Sometimes it's fun to complain, but my company does in fact treat us pretty well.
 

DesertMedic66

Forum Troll
11,273
3,452
113
Reading all of these makes me think that my company isn't private. But I know it's a private company lol.
 

johnrsemt

Forum Deputy Chief
1,678
263
83
If you go through a set of batteries in your pager monthly.

If co-workers complain that they never get OT; but also say that they turn their pagers off when they are not on the clock.

When you don't call for OT shifts until they have been paged out for at least 6 hours so that others can get the chance; but still have more OT than you can work.
 

Rev.IKON

Forum Crew Member
63
0
0
after copying you on scene you get a page that says "do not take the pillow or linens."

when you have to use the blue non fitted disposable sheets. and you could never figure out if the white side or blue goes on top.
 
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