The material covered is the same, and many of these Paramedics, AMTs, EMTs, and EMRs already have not only state certificates but years of experience doing the job. Under this law, they would all be forced to stop and go back to school with a nationally-certified program. The Paramedic program is 13 months long, and the test costs $300, so you'd lose a year of pay and then be forced to pony up for the exam as well. The other programs are shorter but also have a similar issue.
This follows a move at the end of last year to cancel all Technical Rescue certification programs that were not fully complete at midnight on New Year's Eve. If you had completed 100 of the 120 hours of training, but were still one course short, you lost everything and had to start over. This was done just so they could issue a certificate under a different version of the NFPA manual governing such operations. Because of Hurricane Helene, we lost almost all opportunities to finish classes from late September through the end of the year. I asked my state representative to see if a waiver could be granted given the State and Federal states of emergency occasioned by the hurricane, but no: the paperwork rules all. Many thousands of training hours were lost across the state so that the paperwork would look better, at the cost of actual rescuers who could physically help you if you needed it.
Government at its worst, pursuing documentation rather than actual goods and at the cost of the actual good that was really wanted by the people. If you're having a heart attack or lying broken at the bottom of a gorge, it's small comfort that the reason no one is coming to save you is so that the paperwork can look better for the insurance agencies. That is, however, what legislators and bureaucrats care about.
For starters, maybe rescue personnel should run a background check on all injured persons, to find out if they are employed by the State. And if so, refuse service. There is no end, literally no end, to this sort of crap- the State, since it produces nothing, can afford to get so wrapped up in meaningless paperwork that no action takes place. One example from England was of their rescue personnel watching a person drown in waist deep water ten yards away, because they did not have the correct certification for water rescue. I can't imagine what this must do to a soul.
ReplyDeleteThe people that have a credential want to protect their own interests, not the public's or even the profession's. Medical fields are riddled with them.
ReplyDeleteThis isn't coming from the people who have a credential. Those people, with state credentials, are happy with the system. It's politicians who are forcing this. What we need is a credentialing system for politicians ...
DeleteAt least requiring a full cosmetology license in order to braid hair is physically harmless to those not directly involved. Reducing the number of EMTs et cetera … Foolishness and turf-guarding taken to a dangerous extreme.
ReplyDeleteLittleRed1
Ya know, it's not like there's a nationwide shortage of EMTs or anything, er, oh ...
ReplyDelete