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The City of Indianapolis will partner with Health and Hospital Corporation of Marion County (HHC) to provide EMS services. Wishard Memorial Hospital will serve as the sponsoring hospital. Through its strong and longstanding relationship with HHC, the Indiana University School of Medicine will provide medical leadership for the new division in the areas of quality, education, training and research. Mayor Ballard directed the Department of Public Safety to study the overlapping EMS services of IFD and Wishard Health Services and determine opportunities to enhance quality and efficiencies. The first element in the unification plan involves the merger of EMS services provided by IFD and Wishard Health Services.
“Many health industry experts and community leaders have long advocated for EMS reform and consolidation of EMS services throughout Marion County, and today Indianapolis is taking a major step in that direction,” said Mayor Ballard. “Creating efficiencies like this is something we all recognize as a key component of good government. We will improve the quality of key services and reduce costs at the same time" . . .
Marion County neighborhoods affected by this unification are the areas currently served by the IFD (Warren and Washington townships) and Wishard EMS (inside the historic city limits, Franklin Township and the Town of Speedway) . . .
An EMS chief with equal stature with the Indianapolis fire and police chiefs will report to the director of Public Safety. The EMS chief will be a physician within the IU School of Medicine’s Department of Emergency Medicine. HHC will encumber the operational costs, liabilities and all organizational responsibilities for the unified service. A medical advisory committee representing area hospitals will remain in place for clinical oversight.
Local state, and federal budgets are only a record of how much goverment over spends the taxpayer's money.
I would expect the additional units pad out the log records so that they can also pad out the budget.In Perry Twp I see this routinely - ladders and engines being sent to medical runs. A neighbor has chronic respiratory issues and every time, there's an ambulance and 1 or 2 big red trucks that pull up.I can understand the need to have adequate manpower and to err on the side of safety but I think the 911 operators could ferret out a better response, particularly for the 'repeat customer.'
To the contrary, the tax activists CAN brag that our work in 2007 led to a $3.1 billion dollar decrease in spending in 2010 compared to 2009. And the tax activists can brag that our work led to an overall spending decrease of more than $2 BILLION when you compare 2010 spending to 2006. They need to put us in charge and do what we say. Oh yeah, that's right. We're supposed to be the ones in charge. Only our public servants don't normally do as we say.
Melyssa, You could not be more wrong. The only government spending reductions that have occurred to date is because of the severe downturn in the economy that forced reduced government spending at the state and local level. State and local governments can't simply print up money and issue a bunch of IOUs to run deficit spending like the federal government.
From the online Star today:Indiana has brought in $957 million less in revenue for fiscal year 2010 thanlawmakers budgeted for, State Auditor Tim Berry announced this morning inclosing the state's books for the year.To make ends meet, state officials made $669 million in spending cuts andreduced reserves from $1.3 billion to $830 million.
I think the estimates from property tax savings are probably in the $800 million range, although the DLGF so far can't give me exact data.
Are you calculating the additional state sales tax increase we are paying as a trade-off for the tax caps? Don't forget the Peterson income tax increase that Ballard made permanent either, even though the state picked up the costs intended to be used from that tax increase for public safety pension debt and county welfare costs.
The only way to see savings is to eliminate jobs. My sources tell me that spinning off the EMS service might be a way to reduce fire runs and ultimately reduce the need for firefighters. Stay tuned and keep your eye on this one!
Caught Ballard gaming on the taxpayer dime again, AI. Great job!
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Local state, and federal budgets are only a record of how much goverment over spends the taxpayer's money.
I would expect the additional units pad out the log records so that they can also pad out the budget.
In Perry Twp I see this routinely - ladders and engines being sent to medical runs. A neighbor has chronic respiratory issues and every time, there's an ambulance and 1 or 2 big red trucks that pull up.
I can understand the need to have adequate manpower and to err on the side of safety but I think the 911 operators could ferret out a better response, particularly for the 'repeat customer.'
To the contrary, the tax activists CAN brag that our work in 2007 led to a $3.1 billion dollar decrease in spending in 2010 compared to 2009.
And the tax activists can brag that our work led to an overall spending decrease of more than $2 BILLION when you compare 2010 spending to 2006.
They need to put us in charge and do what we say. Oh yeah, that's right. We're supposed to be the ones in charge. Only our public servants don't normally do as we say.
Melyssa, You could not be more wrong. The only government spending reductions that have occurred to date is because of the severe downturn in the economy that forced reduced government spending at the state and local level. State and local governments can't simply print up money and issue a bunch of IOUs to run deficit spending like the federal government.
From the online Star today:
Indiana has brought in $957 million less in revenue for fiscal year 2010 than
lawmakers budgeted for, State Auditor Tim Berry announced this morning in
closing the state's books for the year.
To make ends meet, state officials made $669 million in spending cuts and
reduced reserves from $1.3 billion to $830 million.
I think the estimates from property tax savings are probably in the $800 million range, although the DLGF so far can't give me exact data.
Are you calculating the additional state sales tax increase we are paying as a trade-off for the tax caps? Don't forget the Peterson income tax increase that Ballard made permanent either, even though the state picked up the costs intended to be used from that tax increase for public safety pension debt and county welfare costs.
The only way to see savings is to eliminate jobs. My sources tell me that spinning off the EMS service might be a way to reduce fire runs and ultimately reduce the need for firefighters.
Stay tuned and keep your eye on this one!
Caught Ballard gaming on the taxpayer dime again, AI. Great job!
Post a Comment