The Province is likely going to change their mind about taking over ambulance service on April 1. This is going to pose all kinds of problems for municipalities both rural and urban.
Municipalities prepared their 2005 budgets with the assurance that they would no longer be responsible for ambulance service after the end of March, now most of them haven't budgetted funding for this service and by the look of it they are still going to be responsible.
Rural Alberta should be particularly concerned. In many areas only BLS ( Basic Life Support) coaches are available. ALS ( Advanced Life Support ) coaches usually are only housed in the largest village or town within an Ambulance Region. This leaves much of rural Alberta without ALS support, which can sometimes mean the difference between life and death.
I agree with the take over of ambulances by the Health Regions but the $150 million that the province feels it will cost will easily be gobbled up by the large centres and leave rural Alberta receiving second rate service.
In areas where there are Ambulance Authorities ( I chaired our local one for years ) the municipalities involved are requisitioned annually for the operating costs that aren't covered by the provincial grants. Thus, municipalities with a higher level of assessment can afford a better service, which really isn't the way it should happen so a takeover by the Health Regions would be a more consistent and fair way to deliver ambulance service, however, there will be an added cost to the Province to pick up the costs currently being provided by municipalities.
Municipalities prepared their 2005 budgets with the assurance that they would no longer be responsible for ambulance service after the end of March, now most of them haven't budgetted funding for this service and by the look of it they are still going to be responsible.
Rural Alberta should be particularly concerned. In many areas only BLS ( Basic Life Support) coaches are available. ALS ( Advanced Life Support ) coaches usually are only housed in the largest village or town within an Ambulance Region. This leaves much of rural Alberta without ALS support, which can sometimes mean the difference between life and death.
I agree with the take over of ambulances by the Health Regions but the $150 million that the province feels it will cost will easily be gobbled up by the large centres and leave rural Alberta receiving second rate service.
In areas where there are Ambulance Authorities ( I chaired our local one for years ) the municipalities involved are requisitioned annually for the operating costs that aren't covered by the provincial grants. Thus, municipalities with a higher level of assessment can afford a better service, which really isn't the way it should happen so a takeover by the Health Regions would be a more consistent and fair way to deliver ambulance service, however, there will be an added cost to the Province to pick up the costs currently being provided by municipalities.
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