New York Daily News

10BAND OF SISTERS Huge number of EMS calls in COVID peak

Women bridge gender gap, making FDNY’s EMS Pipes and Drums U.S.’ only such co-ed group

- BY THOMAS TRACY BY THOMAS TRACY AND CATHY BURKE

Bagpipes aren’t just for burly boys.

Three women who march to the beat of their own drum have changed the gender makeup of the FDNY’s EMS Pipes and Drums band, making it the only co-ed EMS pipe band in the nation.

After scores of parades, funerals — and most recently, President Biden’s inaugurati­on — pipers Rene Rogers and Virginia Creary, and drummer Althea Redican, still draw surprised smiles from the sidelines, giving them the inspiratio­n to march on.

“Other women see us when we are in the parade and they call out to us the most,” Redican, a 34-year-old emergency medical technician, told the Daily News. “It’s a liberating feeling to see women surrounded by a bunch of guys doing the same thing that they are doing. It breaks the stigma that that pipe bands are only for men.”

When bagpipes bands were first formed hundreds of years ago, they led soldiers into battle.

The first time women publicly played was 1935, when the Braemar Girls’ Pipe Band performed at the Cowal Highland Gathering in Scotland, an event that celebrates all things Scottish.

Over the next 85 years, more women joined pipes bands or started their own, though their numbers were always small.

But the EMS Pipes and Drums band is setting the pace for change: Since forming in 2006, pipes band leaders have been eagerly opening their doors to female pipers, even if they don’t know how to play.

“They taught me how to play the bagpipes,” said Rogers, a retired paramedic. “I went into it thinking, ‘It’s only nine notes, how hard could it be?’ It wasn’t quite as easy as I thought.”

Rogers, a mother of three, has been playing with the EMS Pipes and Drums since 2013, and still gets a charge by telling people she can blare out “Amazing Grace”

The FDNY EMS first responders who literally race to medical emergencie­s — sweeping in to triage patients as they rush them to advanced hospital care — were tested as never before when COVID-19 first ravaged New York City in March 2020.

In March and April last year, the FDNY’s EMS first responders rushed to help in the most medical emergencie­s on a daily basis in New York City history, according to recent statistics released by Commission­er Daniel Nigro.

Call volume increased by thousands, with the highest total ever coming on March 30 when there were 6,527 medical emergencie­s, he said.

“Worse than 9/11,” pandemic-weary paramedic and EMS instructor Chris Feliciano told the Daily News in early May. “9/11 was just one day. This was daily mayhem, chaos for so many days. People were working 80 hours a week. It was just nonstop, no down time.”

The number of FDNY EMS “incidents” broken down to reflect “fever/cough” — the classic COVID-19 symptoms — were truly staggering, the department’s data showed. And there were likely thousands more COVID-related calls that were classified in a different category.

According to the data, there was just one “fever/cough” call in December 2019 and 24 in January 2020 — and then an ominous 124 “fever/cough” calls in February 2020.

In March that year, that number ballooned to 5,696. The following month, those calls soared to 27,578 as the city officially entered its first wave of the deadly coronaviru­s pandemic.

The number has since not gone below the 2020 low in August of 4,933 “fever/cough” incidents.

Beginning this year, during a horrific post-holiday surge of the virus, FDNY EMS responded to 14,098 “fever/cough” month the number 13,161.

Ironically, FDNY EMS responded to 1,412,690 total medical emergencie­s in 2020, down 8% from 2019 when the department responded to 1,531,870 medical emergencie­s — the most ever recorded in a single year.

Yet EMS first responders still fight the image of an ancillary service that’s ill-paid for its life-saving role.

FDNY EMS Local 2507 President Oren Barzilay, who joined EMS in July 1995, just months before the service was merged into the FDNY 25 years ago, laments service has always gotten short-shrift for the yeoman work it performs.

“I remember very clearly when our trucks were being called in to change the wording on the ambulance and they changed NYC EMS to FDNY. When we responded to calls, everyone was looking at us and the firefighte­rs were not happy,” Barzilay said. “At the time they didn’t want anything to do with us identifyin­g ourselves with FDNY. It was a big rivalry back in the day. Most thought that the EMS profession had nothing to do with being a firefighte­r.

“When they gave us FDNY uniforms, that just created even more tension,” he added. “The firefighte­rs had to do extreme agility tests and we didn’t, and they felt that it wasn’t right to wear the same patch if we didn’t have to do the same sacrifices. But today we do the same sacrifices.”

The City Council has been sympatheti­c to the wage parity issue, last May passing a resolution calling for those first responders to be paid comparably to firefighte­rs and police officers.

The salary of an FDNY EMT starts around $35,000 and rises to $50,000 over five years. By comparison, an entry-level firefighte­r starts at $45,000 and within five years will earn over $100,000 annually, not including overtime. But the bulk of the FDNY’s roughly 1.5 million 911 calls are answered by EMS, data show. calls. Last dipped to

 ??  ?? Left to right, FDNY’s EMS pipers Rene Rogers (getup top right) and Virginia Creary (also below right) and drummer Althea Redican still draw surprised smiles from the sidelines.
Left to right, FDNY’s EMS pipers Rene Rogers (getup top right) and Virginia Creary (also below right) and drummer Althea Redican still draw surprised smiles from the sidelines.
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