The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
County settles issues with ambulance provider
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.