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Texas city council approves $4.2M to cover EMS shortfall

Fort Worth-based MedStar has not recieved city funding since 2010, but retention costs for providers have risen since the pandemic, spokesman Matt Zavadsky said

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MedStar services 14 cities in Tarrant County, including Fort Worth, Haltom City, White Settlement, Saginaw and Sansom Park, according to the agency鈥檚 website.

Photo/MedStar Mobile Healthcare

By Harriet Ramos
Fort Worth Star-Telegram

FORT WORTH, Texas 鈥 The Fort Worth City Council voted Tuesday to approve the 2024 budget, including .

Currently the $4.2 million is set to come out of Fort Worth鈥檚 coffers, but city manager David Cooke said discussions are ongoing with the other to determine how much they will contribute.

鈥淭hey all want to participate,鈥 Cooke said, adding that it鈥檚 just a matter of the details being worked out.

The ambulance provider services 14 cities in Tarrant County, including Fort Worth, Haltom City, White Settlement, Saginaw and Sansom Park, according to the agency鈥檚 website.

Assistant city manager Valerie Washington told the Star-Telegram in August that any amount contributed by the partner cities will lower the amount Fort Worth has to pay but won鈥檛 increase the amount MedStar receives.

MedStar hasn鈥檛 received funding from Fort Worth and the other member cities since 2010.

MedStar spokesperson Matt Zavadsky said expenses to retain emergency medical technicians and paramedics have drastically increased since the COVID-19 pandemic and at the same time insurance companies are paying less. The result is a shortfall that MedStar has had to make up by using reserve funds, he said.

Washington emphasized the funding for MedStar is transitional so the ambulance service can maintain normal operations while Mayor Mattie Parker鈥檚 Ad Hoc Council Committee on Emergency Medical Response reevaluates MedStar鈥檚 services and reviews other EMS models.

The committee has until April 30, 2024, to complete its review and recommend 鈥渢he best path forward for Fort Worth鈥檚 Emergency Medical Services,鈥 according to a letter from Parker addressed to the Fort Worth City Council.

The money for the transitional funding is in the non-departmental fund of the 2024 budget, according to Washington. Another council vote will be required before the $4. 2 million can be turned over to MedStar.

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漏2023 Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

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