Baltimore Sun Sunday

Fire Department response times not released

- —Yvonne Wenger

City lawyers refused to release informatio­n about the Baltimore Fire Department’s response times, dispatch errors and paramedic staffing rates.

Benjamin A. Bor, a special assistant solicitor in the city’s Law Department, told The Baltimore Sun this month the city was denying two Public Informatio­n Act requests from the newspaper on grounds that the agency did not have the documents to provide.

The only exception was an audio copy of a July call to 911 in which a dispatcher initially sent paramedics to the wrong address.

Bor said in an email the Fire Department “is unable to produce a full, un-redacted copy of the record of the aforementi­oned 911 call to you because it consists almost entirely of medical informatio­n about an individual that the custodian is required to protect from disclosure.”

The Sun originally sought the call and other informatio­n from the Fire Department in March, but received little. The newspaper appealed to the Law Department to release that informatio­n and more.

Councilman Brandon M. Scott, chairman of the Public Safety Committee, is convening a hearing at 4 p.m. Tuesday to seek similar data from Fire Department officials.

Damon Effingham, legal and policy director for Common Cause Maryland, said he was surprised city lawyers said the Fire Department did not have some of the records The Sun requested, such as a breakdown of the percentage of 911 calls made for fire suppressio­n and medical service. Releasing such informatio­n helps essential city services function better, he said.

“It is unfortunat­e if they’re not keeping it, and if they are, the point of the Public Informatio­n Act is for the public and legislator­s to review data and fine-tune polices and solutions,” Effingham said. “There are very few places where that is more important than emergency services. “This data has to be somewhere.” The Sun also requested informatio­n for each of the last three years on how many hours of overtime did dispatcher­s and paramedics claim; how many dispatcher­s and paramedics work for the Fire Department; how many 911 calls did dispatcher­s answer; how many calls did medic units respond to in an average shift; what was the policy governing when dispatcher­s send an advanced or basic medic unit; and how much was the base pay for an EMT and paramedic.

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