Sunday, February 3, 2008

Talked to Ambulance/EMS Volunteer Feb. 2

I just met with a neighbor of mine, who was an active member of the Trumansburg Volunteer Fire Department and part of the volunteer staff of the Ambulance/EMS for several years. I explained my concerns about the privatization of the Ambulance/EMS. He disagreed with my use of the word privatization because he doesn't believe that this is the first step on the road to a fully private for profit Ambulance service. He may be right, but until I find a better word, I will continue to use "privatization". I consider every step in that direction to be a step in the wrong direction wether it results in a fully private company or not.

I told my neighbor that if I were a volunteer with the Ambulance/EMS service in it's current form (fully taxpayer funded) I would feel proud to be a part of a group that devoted time to helping their neighbors in times of need, and I would feel good about being able to say "there's no charge for this". If my Ambulance company then entered a relationship with private for profit insurance companies and billing companies, and I was now required to get customer's social security numbers and insurance company information, this would change how I felt about the work.

My neighbor informed me that the number of volunteers in Trumansburg is relatively high presently. We are not having nearly as much trouble maintaining sufficient numbers of volunteers as neighboring communities are. Perhaps this is because a fully taxpayer funded service is good for morale. My neighbor felt that some people might be less apt to continue to serve if we took this step towards privatization.

My neighbor told me that he was at the meeting with the representative from Professional Ambulance Billing, and Chris Thomas, and was told that a bill would be sent to care recipients regardless of health insurance status. There are 47 million Americans currently without health insurance. Most of these people don't have a lot of spare cash. Most of these people are honest, hard working, tax paying folks who helped pay for the equipment and facility that houses our Ambulance/EMS. They don't have health insurance because our government doesn't have the foresight and concern for their citizenry that the governments in the rest of the industrialized world has. Yet these people would be hit with a big bill from our ambulance service on top of a big bill from the hospital if they had a serious medical emergency. Most bankruptcies are caused by medical emergencies, and the bankruptcy laws were recently changed in favor of big corporations.