The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

County settles issues with ambulance provider

- By Joshua Sharpe joshua.sharpe@ajc.com

DeKalb commission­ers on Tuesday voted unanimousl­y to approve a settlement with the county’s ambulance provider after a long history of complaints.

Un d er the agreement, American Medical Response will resolve $1.9 million in contract penalties for allegedly providing poor service — though only $600,000 will be paid in cash. The com- pany, which has been subject to complaints of slow response time such as one in Dunwoody that took 58 minutes, previously declined to settle the fees but agreed to increase performanc­e.

Tuesday’s agreement gives a $1.3 million credit to AMR for boosting staffing and adding ambulances at two DeKalb fire stations — one in Dunwoody, the other in Stonecrest. The company added the units to the fire stations May 28.

DeKalb CEO Mike Thur- mond said the company has been doing better since then. But statistics weren’t imme- diately available.

AMR Regional Director Terence Ramotar blamed the company’s response times on a number of issues: traf- fic, congestion, delays at hos- pitals and a regionwide paramedic shortage.

“Our focus has remained steadfast on serving the citizens of DeKalb County,” Ram- ator said. “We are extremely proud of the critical work the men and women of AMR do in partnershi­p with DeKalb Fire Rescue, day in and day out. In a tough job such as this, good work and good outcomes often go unnoticed.”

The concerns with the com- pany are longstandi­ng, but it was an incident in Dunwoody in May that drew public outrage after a now-fired EMT was arrested for allegedly punching a handcuffed teen patient. Citing the attack and lax performanc­e, Dunwoody officials voted to declare an EMS “crisis” in the city and appeal to the state of Georgia for help.

To ensure emergency ser- vice, the DeKalb County fire-rescue agency-dispatches its own units initially to most medical calls because the county’s firefighte­rs are all EMTs, and many are para- medics. The county has said the fire-rescue department’s average response time is 7.5 minutes.

AMR’s primary role is to provide emergency transport services, for which it bills patients, not the county.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Tuesday’s agreement gives a $1.3 million credit to AMR for measures at two DeKalb fire stations.
CONTRIBUTE­D Tuesday’s agreement gives a $1.3 million credit to AMR for measures at two DeKalb fire stations.

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