Guest guest Posted January 30, 2007 Report Share Posted January 30, 2007 But do not forget that those same employees who are doing transfers are no longer available for 911. You may quickly find that additional staff is required and consuming all or more of the additional revenue. Dick -- FF/EMT Celina Fire Department At 10:07 AM 1/30/2007, you wrote: >I don't know about culture (OK make fun of this one.) but it is more >about the money and how much the taxpayers have to pick up. If I can >pick up another 300k by doing transfers with the same amount of >employees then that is a savings of 300k to the taxpayers who I >answer to. 911 calls pay squat. > >Henry > Re: Re: [TEXAS_EMS] Who should do transfer calls? > > > > > Here in Calhoun County we do it all and want to keep it that way. > > > > Henry > > > >And if I remember right, y'all always have done so, haven't you? I remember >when my friend Louis worked there back in, I believe, the year a.d. >1857 or so, y'all did NET's as well as 9-1-1. > >More than likely, the long-standing tradition of " doing it all " is part of >your culture, and therefore works relatively seamlessly. > >Not so for many, probably most, public agencies. > >Good for y'all! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2007 Report Share Posted January 30, 2007 But with an increasing body of literature showing response times really don't matter in terms of patient outcome-it may be a wash. BEB _____ From: texasems-l [mailto:texasems-l ] On Behalf Of Dick Sent: Tuesday, January 30, 2007 11:07 AM To: texasems-l Subject: Re: Who should do transfer calls? But do not forget that those same employees who are doing transfers are no longer available for 911. You may quickly find that additional staff is required and consuming all or more of the additional revenue. Dick -- FF/EMT Celina Fire Department At 10:07 AM 1/30/2007, you wrote: >I don't know about culture (OK make fun of this one.) but it is more >about the money and how much the taxpayers have to pick up. If I can >pick up another 300k by doing transfers with the same amount of >employees then that is a savings of 300k to the taxpayers who I >answer to. 911 calls pay squat. > >Henry > Re: Re: [TEXAS_EMS] Who should do transfer calls? > >In a message dated 1/30/07 9:07:34 AM, hbarber (AT) cableone (DOT) <mailto:hbarber%40cableone.net> net writes: > > > Here in Calhoun County we do it all and want to keep it that way. > > > > Henry > > > >And if I remember right, y'all always have done so, haven't you? I remember >when my friend Louis worked there back in, I believe, the year a.d. >1857 or so, y'all did NET's as well as 9-1-1. > >More than likely, the long-standing tradition of " doing it all " is part of >your culture, and therefore works relatively seamlessly. > >Not so for many, probably most, public agencies. > >Good for y'all! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2007 Report Share Posted January 30, 2007 , Where can I find the literature? My service has set a " benchmark " of enroute in 90 sec from time of page. I find that really unrealistic. They are simply justifying a 24/7 staffing that the city recently implemented, with full pay for the up 4 hours from 1800 to 2200 and minimum wage unless you get a call for the rest of the night. Jules Re: Who should do transfer calls? But do not forget that those same employees who are doing transfers are no longer available for 911. You may quickly find that additional staff is required and consuming all or more of the additional revenue. Dick -- FF/EMT Celina Fire Department At 10:07 AM 1/30/2007, you wrote: >I don't know about culture (OK make fun of this one.) but it is more >about the money and how much the taxpayers have to pick up. If I can >pick up another 300k by doing transfers with the same amount of >employees then that is a savings of 300k to the taxpayers who I >answer to. 911 calls pay squat. > >Henry > Re: Re: [TEXAS_EMS] Who should do transfer calls? > >In a message dated 1/30/07 9:07:34 AM, hbarber (AT) cableone (DOT) <mailto:hbarber%40cableone.net> net writes: > > > Here in Calhoun County we do it all and want to keep it that way. > > > > Henry > > > >And if I remember right, y'all always have done so, haven't you? I remember >when my friend Louis worked there back in, I believe, the year a.d. >1857 or so, y'all did NET's as well as 9-1-1. > >More than likely, the long-standing tradition of " doing it all " is part of >your culture, and therefore works relatively seamlessly. > >Not so for many, probably most, public agencies. > >Good for y'all! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2007 Report Share Posted January 30, 2007 I was doing some part time work just outside of Austin for a service that required enroute at 60 seconds regardless of time of day. Rough , but we did it. No cheating either, 800mhZ so they knew if you were keying from a handheld or from the truck. Would also be interested in the literature. Mike Re: Who should do transfer calls? But do not forget that those same employees who are doing transfers are no longer available for 911. You may quickly find that additional staff is required and consuming all or more of the additional revenue. Dick -- FF/EMT Celina Fire Department At 10:07 AM 1/30/2007, you wrote: >I don't know about culture (OK make fun of this one.) but it is more >about the money and how much the taxpayers have to pick up. If I can >pick up another 300k by doing transfers with the same amount of >employees then that is a savings of 300k to the taxpayers who I >answer to. 911 calls pay squat. > >Henry > Re: Re: [TEXAS_EMS] Who should do transfer calls? > >In a message dated 1/30/07 9:07:34 AM, hbarber (AT) cableone (DOT) <mailto:hbarber%40cableone.net> net writes: > > > Here in Calhoun County we do it all and want to keep it that way. > > > > Henry > > > >And if I remember right, y'all always have done so, haven't you? I remember >when my friend Louis worked there back in, I believe, the year a.d. >1857 or so, y'all did NET's as well as 9-1-1. > >More than likely, the long-standing tradition of " doing it all " is part of >your culture, and therefore works relatively seamlessly. > >Not so for many, probably most, public agencies. > >Good for y'all! > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2007 Report Share Posted January 30, 2007 Why is 90-sec a problem? Many fire departments have 60-sec benchmarks, and some have 30. Granted, I doubt you can prove that 90 seconds makes a difference, btut does that really matter when a defense attorney can make a jury BELIEVE it did? Mike > , > > Where can I find the literature? My service has set a " benchmark " of > enroute in 90 sec from time of page. I find that really unrealistic. > They are simply justifying a 24/7 staffing that the city recently > implemented, with full pay for the up 4 hours from 1800 to 2200 and > minimum wage unless you get a call for the rest of the night. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2007 Report Share Posted January 30, 2007 Well, I didn't say it was a PROBLEM...I simply think it is unrealistic and unnecessary...not to mention unsafe when you have a crew trying to dress and run through a bay to trucks in under 90 seconds from a dead sleep. Some of us have assessory material that require additional effort and could create an additional hazard...as in putting your bra on.... Jules Re: Who should do transfer calls? Why is 90-sec a problem? Many fire departments have 60-sec benchmarks, and some have 30. Granted, I doubt you can prove that 90 seconds makes a difference, btut does that really matter when a defense attorney can make a jury BELIEVE it did? Mike > , > > Where can I find the literature? My service has set a " benchmark " of > enroute in 90 sec from time of page. I find that really unrealistic. > They are simply justifying a 24/7 staffing that the city recently > implemented, with full pay for the up 4 hours from 1800 to 2200 and > minimum wage unless you get a call for the rest of the night. ________________________________________________________________________ Check Out the new free AIM® Mail -- 2 GB of storage and industry-leading spam and email virus protection. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2007 Report Share Posted January 31, 2007 Acadian is 60 sec during daytime and 90 at night. <a href= " http://vampirefreaks.com " ><img src= " http://e.vampirefreaks.com/banners/Mergazer_2.gif " ></a> <a href= " http://www.myspace.com/emtdragon1 " target= " _blank " ><img src= " http://x.myspace.com/images/Promo/myspace_4.jpg " border= " 0 " ><br><img src= " http://myspace-150.vo.llnwd.net/00417/05/11/417701150_s.jpg " border= " 0 " ><br><font size= " 1 " face= " Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif " >Check me out!</font></a> ________________________________________________________________________________\ ____ Finding fabulous fares is fun. Let Yahoo! FareChase search your favorite travel sites to find flight and hotel bargains. http://farechase.yahoo.com/promo-generic-14795097 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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