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Wednesday
July 25th, 1973
Odessa American
City Enters Ambulance Business
City Ordinance No. 73-65
The Odessa Fire Department entered the
Emergency Ambulance business at high noon Tuesday, July 24th
1973 and firefighters who have volunteered to man
the service were standing by at three fire stations.
Approval of the city's undertaking the responsibility came a
little more than two hours earlier on a unanimous vote by
the city council. Deputy Chief E. W. Parker said ambulance
vehicles complete with drivers and attendants, were ready to
go at the Central Fire Station and at Station # 5 at 38th &
Dixie. A reserve unit which could be pressed into immediate
service if needed, was standing by at Station # 6 at
Brentwood & Grandview, Parker Said.
The City will make a
charge of $25.00 per person per call, and the only
destination the city vehicles may make will be to the
emergency room at the County-owned Medical Center Hospital.
Deputy Chief Parker advised residents needing the emergency
ambulance service to dial 911, which is the
established emergency telephone number here. "They can also
dial the old Fire Department number, or they can go through
the city's PBX system," Parker said, "but 911 will be
a little faster. "And as you know, response is the name of
the game."
The City Council
additionally, voted to accept $70,000 offered Monday by the
Ector County Commissioners Court to help offset the first
year's cost of the ambulance service. It also appropriated
$76,750 from the City's current general fund for that
purpose. The City government's entry into the ambulance
service business came when the private service provided by
Baker Ambulance Service was discontinued. Baker earlier this
month announced it would not seek a renewal of its franchise
for emergency service because of problems with rising cost
and problems with collections from the users. Baker ended
its commitment to the City, Monday, but agreed to provide an
extra 12 hours of service until the council's final approval
Tuesday.
The three temporary
emergency vehicles to be operated by the firefighters are
leased from Modular Ambulance Corp. of Dallas. The City
expects to have its own permanent vehicles ready for use in
December.
The City Manager Ron
Neighbors emphasized that the phone number 911 "is
certainly an important number for all of us to remember and
to teach to our children." Mayor Jim Reese, who noted
that Odessa was the first City in Texas to get the emergency
number 911, warned, "If it is not an emergency,
don't call 911." In fact, the council tacked on a
second ordinance which makes it a crime to knowingly turn in
a false alarm to that number. The same ordinance prohibits
the operation of an emergency ambulance in the city without
a franchise, and it forbids the use of emergency lights and
siren by a non-emergency vehicle unless it is bringing in a
patient in an emergency case from another town. Violators of
this ordinance would be subject, upon conviction, of a fine
not to exceed $200.
In response to a question
by Councilman Tommy Salmon, Assistant City Manager Ron
Harmon said the city would do it's own billing for the
ambulance service. "Were working out a cooperative method
with the hospital so we can bill out of our operation,"
Harmon said. It has been erroneously reported Monday that
the billing would be done by Ector County since the patients
will be taken to the county's hospital. While Councilman
Dick Clark noted that there will be a year to year cost to
the city of something like $25,000, Mayor Reese replied that
the cost would be even higher if the Firefighters hadn't
volunteered to provide the service.
Councilman Willie Hammond said he wished to commend the
County government for its financial aid and its cooperation
in establishing the ambulance service. Deputy Chief Parker
said the departments ambulance personnel was in new uniforms
and ready to go at noon Tuesday.
Those who were prepared to take
the first shift in the emergency vehicles Tuesday were;
Central Fire Station -
Driver Dan Graves and Attendant Tom Moore.
Station # 5 -
Driver Justin Dewbre and Attendant Clarence Mayo.
Station # 6
(Reserve Unit) - Driver H. C. Cotton and Attendant Jim
Thrush
Plans are underway to provide Emergency Medical Technician
training for the 24 firefighters who will be operating the
three emergency vehicles.
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Thursday July26th,1973
Odessa American
Transition To Ambulance
Driver Smooth For Firefighters
by
Sheila Allee
Becoming ambulance drivers was not as traumatic as Justin
Dewbre and Clarence Mayo had expected. "I didn't get as
upset at the sight of blood as I thought I would," Mayo
reported. And Dewbre added, "I was scared but no more than I
had expected." The two ambulance attendants were the first
to answer a call after the City of Odessa's new emergency
Ambulance Service went into operation at noon Tuesday.
Headquartered at Fire Station # 5 at 38th & Dixie, the two
said their first runs "were the kind you dread and hope will
come after you've had a little experience."
The first alarm sounded
on July 24th, 1973 at 1:11 p.m. for an industrial accident victim. "The guy had
a head injury and was in shock. He didn't want to be taken
to the hospital," Dewbre reported. "It took us nine minutes
to go the seven miles to the construction site at 81st and
West County Road," the driver said.
The second call was a
false traffic accident alarm. The third run was at 2:23 p.m.
when it took the crew three minutes to arrive on the scene
of a car-truck traffic accident at Kermit Hwy and West
County Road. "We had to administer first aid to an elderly
lady in that one," Dewbre reported. A man was also injured
in the mishap.
The two firefighters, who
volunteered for the ambulance duty, said the first day was
"hectic." Dewbre commented "I don't think there is any way
we can be organized until we've had a few runs. Mayo added,
"It's about like we expected it would be. I guess I was
scared when the first alarm sounded, just like I was scared
the first time I got on a fire truck. The emergency workers
explained that calls come through the Fire Department's
Central Dispatcher. The dispatcher notifies the fire station
and the alarm sounds. Fire Station # 5 is equipped with a
buzzer, a loud alarm and small bells throughout the
building. As the alarm sounds, the dispatcher relays
information over the phone. A loud speaker system in the
station picks up the dispatchers voice as he gives the
location and nature of the emergency.
Dewbre said he can plot out the quickest route to the site
as he gets into the ambulance. The drivers proudly displayed
their 1970 Pontiac Ambulance. Dewbre pointed out that the
ambulance attendants are serving double duty since they are
on fire call at the same time they are working the ambulance
shift.
The entire ambulance
operation answered 11 calls during its first day. Seven came
out of Fire Station # 5 and four out of the Central Fire
Station. Dewbre & Mayo were not vociferous about their
reasons for volunteering for ambulance duty. "I just thought
I'd like it," Mayo said. And Dewbre agreed. And Dewbre
added, "I'll probably still have butterflies a year from now
when I do a call. If I don't, Ill start worrying,"
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First Paramedic Class
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August 14, 1973 -
Purchased three (3) Modulances for
$39,069.00
September 24, 1973 -
Started 1st EMS
class with 30 men.
September 25, 1973
- EMS Motorola radio system (155.22 MHZ)
purchased for $7,840.00
November 24, 1973 -
Finished 1st EMS class with 29 men.
February 20, 1974 -
The three new Modulances arrived
February 26, 1974 -
Bio-Medical radio system purchased for
$53,657.00
August 26, 1975 -
Added a larger Bio-Medical systems Doctors
console for $2,805.00 and 11 Telecare Heart
Monitor suitcases for $8,975.00
January 1975 -
Started 1st Paramedic Class with 24
Firefighters and 7 Civilians.
June 1975 -
Finished 1st Paramedic Class
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1996
In 1996 under the direction of Fire Chief
John Brown and Assistant Chief Charlie Smith
the Odessa Fire Department made changes in
how the EMS would operate. After careful
analysis of our department, they determined
we could eliminate three (3) specialized
vehicles, consisting of two (2) rescue
vehicles and one (1) ladder truck. The
rescue vehicles could be deleted from our
fleet by simply placing the rescue equipment
on a fire engine, allowing that fire truck
to serve double duty. The ladder truck could
be deleted by replacing an older, existing
engine with a fire engine equipped with a
ladder, such an engine is called a Quint.
Combining the capabilities of these units
allowed us to move personnel formerly used
to staff this equipment to our eight (8)
fire engines, which gave us a total of four
(4) personnel per engine, which is certainly
the safest and most efficient number of
people to better deliver fire suppression to
our community.
We were fortunate enough to have
enough certified Paramedics to place at
least one on each engine as well as the
funds saved from deleting the rescue and
ladder trucks, to stock and equip our eight
(8) fire engines with the same supplies and
equipment used on our M.I.C.U. ambulances.
Chief Brown made it mandatory for all
personnel to be medically certified to at
least the Emergency Care Attendant (E.C.A.)
level, progressing our department from
approximately 50% certified personnel to
100%. With the eight (8) fire engines
staffed with at least one Paramedic and
three (3) E.C.A.'s equipped with the same
medical equipment and supplies as a M.I.C.U.
ambulance, we increased our medical coverage
to our community by 50%. This began the
"Paramedic Engine" era of the Odessa Fire
Department.
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1998
The Fire Department switched from the
original six (6) lead EKG monitors to twelve
(12) lead which will give the Emergency
Department Physicians an opportunity to
diagnosis of Cardiac problems much quicker
with a more detailed EKG, which can be
transmitted from the ambulance to the
emergency room prior to transporting the
patient.
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