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鈥楢ll the ambulances are struggling': N.Y. EMS providers strain to fill void after AMR exit

After AMR pulled out of Cayuga County, local EMS crews have managed to keep up鈥攂ut are battling the same mounting costs, staffing shortages and systemwide strain

fourtownfirstaidsquad.jpg

Four Town ambulances.

Four Town First Aid Squad/Facebook

By Zach Jaworski
The Citizen

CAYUGA COUNTY, N.Y. 鈥 Providers of emergency medical services in Cayuga County had to step up when American Medical Response pulled out of the area at the end of 2023.

AMR, the largest private ambulance company in the U.S., attributed its decision to leave to rising equipment costs, a less qualified post-COVID-19 workforce, and reimbursement rates it called stagnant.

While local EMS providers have been able to respond to all those calls that would have gone to AMR, they鈥檙e still facing the same problems that prompted the company to leave.

鈥淎ll the ambulances are struggling,鈥 Matt Smokoski, director of Four Town First Aid Squad in Moravia, told The Citizen. 鈥淭here is a huge problem all over the place.鈥

Cayuga County has seen its own EMS exits as well. Ambulances operated by the Weedsport, Union Springs, Conquest and, most recently, Fleming No. 2 fire departments have all ceased operations over the last decade and a half. According to a 2024 report from the New York State Comptroller鈥檚 Office, between 2019 and 2022 the state鈥檚 active number of EMS providers declined by 17.5%.

When it comes to those closings, Cayuga County Director of Emergency Services Riley Shurtleff told The Citizen that equipment costs, low pay and a less interested workforce all have a seat at the table.

鈥淚t costs $3,500 a semester for two semesters and what鈥檚 basically a college class to become a paramedic,鈥 said Shurtleff, noting the basic emergency medical technician training cost can be high as well.

Those costs are usually covered up-front by the department, provider or trainee until they can get reimbursed by state. But there are also other costs providers have to keep in mind, Shurtleff said.

鈥淎 new ambulance costs $280,000, and EMTs and paramedics are getting paid at an hourly rate,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e trying just to maintain operations, basically, EMS is a losing game.鈥

鈥楾here鈥檚 always going to be a shortfall鈥

For small volunteer EMS providers like Four Town, the main source of funding outside of community donations is insurance claims.

That鈥檚 mostly Medicaid 鈥 but it only pays for about 40% of ambulance rides. Earlier this year, the United New York Ambulance Network sent a letter urging providers to tell their local assembly members and senators to push for increased Medicaid reimbursements. According to a news release from the network, Medicaid pays less in New York than in all surrounding states.

鈥淩eimbursement from the insurance companies is not enough to allow an ambulance to survive and work,鈥 Smokoski said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 always going to be a shortfall.鈥

Smokoski said one solution being floated to mitigate that shortfall is a New York State Senate bill making municipal ambulance services essential. But the bill has been in legislative limbo since 2021.

Jackie Dickinson , executive director of Southern Cayuga Instant Aid, believes that the resulting municipal funds for EMS could help ensure paramedics and technicians are compensated better.

鈥淣ew York state needs to make EMS an essential service,鈥 Dickinson told The Citizen. 鈥淪o we can pay providers a living wage.鈥

Shurtleff agrees, but worries that the legislation would not guarantee additional funding unless it was explicitly written into the law.

鈥淭here still has to be financial support,鈥 he said.

鈥淚f you tell a town tomorrow to raise an ambulance that鈥檚 only ever had volunteers, there needs to be financial support for this to happen. But where is it gonna come from?鈥

As of 2022, Cayuga County put $0.15 per resident toward ambulance services, according to the state comptroller鈥檚 office.

Of the 15 counties with that data available, Cayuga edges out just Orleans . The median amount paid per person by those counties is $1.41, and the average is $11.88.

鈥榃e鈥檙e so fragmented鈥

Kezia Sullivan, director of operations for Auburn City Ambulance, believes the state legislation could be helpful to EMS providers. But for now, she鈥檇 like to see better collaboration across Cayuga County.

鈥淲e鈥檙e so fragmented, it鈥檚 our biggest weakness. There are so many agencies, so many small ambulance services, and many different kinds of ambulance services,鈥 Sullivan told The Citizen.

鈥淣either of those things are necessarily bad, but there is a lot of room to collaborate.鈥

That fragmentation has led to confusion about which ambulances can respond to an emergency. Sullivan said 911 dispatchers often send more than one, typically the first- and second-closest, because they鈥檙e not sure if both are staffed and need to ensure someone responds. But a town can be left vulnerable when its ambulance has to cover an emergency in the town next door.

Additionally, the only provider being compensated for responding is the one that transports the patient, if one is transported at all.

鈥淭he real cost of running an ambulance company is readiness,鈥 said Sullivan, noting that EMS providers do not generate revenue when on standby.

One solution brought up by both Sullivan and Smokoski is a dispatch system that would assign priority levels to emergency calls.

They believe this system would help service people better and make sure limited resources are going to the most urgent situations, like cardiac arrests and traumatic injuries.

The system would reserve advance life support ambulances for those situations, leaving the county鈥檚 other type of ambulance, basic life support, for the rest.

Providers of emergency medical services in Cayuga County aren鈥檛 entirely sure how those services will look beginning in 2024.

鈥業t isn鈥檛 getting easier鈥

Even as Cayuga County EMS providers face these problems, call volume continues to increase, Shurtleff said. But the cause is hard to pinpoint.

鈥淎t no point in time has there been a location that was not being covered by an ambulance,鈥 he said.

鈥淏ut I do think we have a rise in call volume because of an aging population, as well as a national trend of non-emergency calls because wait times are so long at primary care providers or urgent cares.鈥

Matt Kidd, a volunteer for Fleming Fire Department No. 1鈥檚 ambulance, said the amount of time EMS staff spend with patients at hospitals is increasing because they are also understaffed.

He believes that time commitment, along with costs, may be turning some people off from becoming or remaining involved with EMS.

鈥淭he turnaround time for a call has definitely increased. With not only the hospital but the regulations from the Department of Health and you got to do your paperwork and restock the ambulance and clean it,鈥 Kidd said. 鈥淎s a volunteer, you know, I鈥檓 coming from home, I鈥檓 leaving my family to come do the call. A lot of us don鈥檛 mind doing it, but that鈥檚 tough on us as well.鈥

Even as more problems emerge for EMS providers across Cayuga County 鈥 from increasing calls and costs to decreasing reimbursement 鈥 Shurtleff believes those providers will continue to push forward.

鈥淭his is not a simple answer, this is not a one-size-fits-all,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 can tell you that 911 calls will not go unanswered, but it isn鈥檛 getting easier.鈥

漏 2025 The Citizen, Auburn, N.Y.
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