The Columbus Dispatch

EMS services on two ballots in Fayette County

- By Dean Narciso dnarciso@dispatch.com @DeanNarcis­o

Voters in Fayette County face two primary election issues for emergency medical services: one countywide, the other in a township that encompasse­s Tanger Outlets in Jeffersonv­ille.

If both levies pass, Jefferson Township residents would have double EMS coverage and could pay twice for it.

The township of about 2,600 swells to about 14,000 with daytime visitors. It is served by Fayette County Memorial Hospital EMS, a county-operated system based in Washington Court House that has struggled financiall­y. The township has an average response time of 12½ minutes. The national average is 7 minutes.

“I think a heart attack that happens in Washington Court House is just as serious as one that happens in Jefferson Township,” said Ryan Yenger, a Jefferson Township trustee. “No one should have to wait 15 or 16 minutes.”

Fayette County EMS serves 12 townships, including Jefferson. Response times for several of the smaller townships exceed 14 minutes, records show.

Jefferson Township drew 337 emergency runs last year, about 8 percent of the county’s total of 4,120 runs, according to county records.

That’s why the township has placed a 5-mill continuing levy on the May 8 ballot. The $700,000 it would generate annually would create a 24/7 township EMS service, including new vehicles and living quarters at its lone fire station. It would cost property owners about $275 per $100,000 of valuation annually.

The countywide levy is 1.3 mills for 3 years to raise about $1 million annually. It would cost owners about $45 per $100,000 of property value.

Fayette County sought an opinion from the Ohio attorney general’s office to determine the consequenc­es if voters approve both issues. It answered that the county and township could form a joint EMS district that could exempt township residents from paying the countywide tax. But the county would have the discretion to do so. If both levies fail, the countyoper­ated EMS would continue serving all Fayette residents.

Yenger said he has asked the county for full-time staffing for Jefferson’s single ambulance, currently operated by about eight EMS-trained volunteers.

“I’d love to be able to put a manned station there, but it costs money,” said Rod List, chief of the Fayette County Memorial Hospital EMS.

His budget is $1.2 million annually, about half of which is covered by the county.

Yenger calls the county levy a “Band-Aid” fix.

“Why would you throw money at something that has been mismanaged in the past?” he asked.

Yenger cited a 2005 policy memo saying patients should be taken to the Washington Court House hospital even if Miami Valley Hospital Jamestown Emergency Center was closer.

That policy has been changed, said Mike Diener, CEO of Fayette Memorial. About a third of township patients were taken to Miami Valley last year, he said.

“If that’s your strategy for revenue enhancemen­t and growth, it’s a pretty poor strategy,” he said. “You want people to come because they trust your facility, not because they were coerced by an ambulance driver.”

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