No EMT jobs in AZ?

jlquick

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Hi guys. I just moved to Arizona after getting my NREMT-B and I've had no luck getting a job so far. I haven't actually worked as an EMT yet, so I'm pretty new at applying for this type of job. As far as I can tell, there are 2 ambulance companies in all of the Phoenix: Southwest and PMT. Southwest says that they do not accept applications for jobs that are not posted on their site, EMT is not posted anywhere in AZ. I applied at PMT after finally getting my driving record from the State of Florida and it's been 3 weeks with no reply from them.

Does anyone work out here and know any tricks to getting a job? Or should I just be checking to work as an ER Tech?
 
ER tech is always a job if you plan on continuing your education... But there are always more EMT-Bs than jobs out there
 
i was born and raised in tucson, AZ before joining the military... after i got my NREMT-B cert i applied to southwest in tucson and they were really exited about hiring me, they said that i would be working for them within a week.... UNTIL they asked me how my date of birth, and they found out i was to young 18 at the time and i had to be 21... i was pissed... BUT you could work in the many hospitals until a position opens up... it might not be what you wanna do but you could also apply for the many fire departments that phoenix has... AZ probably has some of the best operated fire departments in the country... there is mesa FD, tempe, FD, scottsdale FD, glendale FD, and the glorious phoenix FD, and dont forget the best tucson FD!!!

good luck
 
Hey, I lived out in Queen Creek back in 2007 when fire and EMS was through Rural Metro. I believe in early 2008 Queen Creek Fire ran their first call. Check it out, its not that far from Mesa depending on which area of Mesa you are in.
 
i was born and raised in tucson, AZ before joining the military... after i got my NREMT-B cert i applied to southwest in tucson and they were really exited about hiring me, they said that i would be working for them within a week.... UNTIL they asked me how my date of birth, and they found out i was to young 18 at the time and i had to be 21... i was pissed... BUT you could work in the many hospitals until a position opens up... it might not be what you wanna do but you could also apply for the many fire departments that phoenix has... AZ probably has some of the best operated fire departments in the country... there is mesa FD, tempe, FD, scottsdale FD, glendale FD, and the glorious phoenix FD, and dont forget the best tucson FD!!!

good luck

I've applied to most of the fire departments around here. I actually moved out here hoping to get on with one of them, but the same week that I got to AZ was when the cities started feeling the economic crunch and decided on hiring freezes. I'm actually pretty far along in the process to become a cop in Tempe. But I don't know when or if I will get a job offer from them.
 
Working as a tech will give you more hands on experience with really sick patients, also you will learn all the sights,sounds and smells of patient care in a more lets say "comfortable" environment. Working on the inside will also help you focus your options, you might decide to go another direction RN or PA or even MD. Don'T get me wrong the world needs IFT people and folks to run BLS but your not going to do much when it comes to advancing your skills let alone learning skills that most basics don't use EKG's,blood draws ,advanced splinting and assisting on codes just to name a few. In the ER your ability to learn is what you make of it, if your into learning there are always people willing to teach you something new. I think all new EMT's should be offered at least 24 hours of ER time to give them a little confidence in working with sick people.


As far as pay,my facility starts techs at 13.00 p/hr with differential up to 2.25 p/hour and top out at 21.00 plus differential. I was offered a job working as an IV Tech/PMA (paramedic assistant) with my volunteer departments ALS transport agency, pay was 10.50 per hour and it would have taken me weeks to see the variety and quantity of patients that I see in the ER in one 12 hour shift. Just my opinion so take it for what its worth. If you decide to tech I can give you some pointers and help you out on your interview. Good luck at what ever you decide.
 
yeah i hear yah man, i guess it was a pretty good idea to join the military after all eh? well any way good luck...
 
I'm up in CA, i'm having a hell of a time finding a job to. I'm just continuing my education and doing pre-employment ride alongs with few companies. Its not looking so good out there :sad:. Good luck to the both of us :unsure:
 
Working as a tech will give you more hands on experience with really sick patients, also you will learn all the sights,sounds and smells of patient care in a more lets say "comfortable" environment. Working on the inside will also help you focus your options, you might decide to go another direction RN or PA or even MD. Don'T get me wrong the world needs IFT people and folks to run BLS but your not going to do much when it comes to advancing your skills let alone learning skills that most basics don't use EKG's,blood draws ,advanced splinting and assisting on codes just to name a few. In the ER your ability to learn is what you make of it, if your into learning there are always people willing to teach you something new. I think all new EMT's should be offered at least 24 hours of ER time to give them a little confidence in working with sick people.


As far as pay,my facility starts techs at 13.00 p/hr with differential up to 2.25 p/hour and top out at 21.00 plus differential. I was offered a job working as an IV Tech/PMA (paramedic assistant) with my volunteer departments ALS transport agency, pay was 10.50 per hour and it would have taken me weeks to see the variety and quantity of patients that I see in the ER in one 12 hour shift. Just my opinion so take it for what its worth. If you decide to tech I can give you some pointers and help you out on your interview. Good luck at what ever you decide.

I got to do some clinical hours in an ER during EMT school and it was a pretty eye opening experience. I got tons more experience with actually using our medical technology during those couple hours than during all of my rides.

I've been looking into Tech jobs out here. There aren't many, but definitely more than for EMTs. I would definitely love to hear any advice that you have to give to get a job at the hospital. I have been considering going back to school to get a higher degree. I think going to medical school would be pretty great, but I need to make some money to get through the pre-reqs.
 
I'm up in CA, i'm having a hell of a time finding a job to. I'm just continuing my education and doing pre-employment ride alongs with few companies. Its not looking so good out there :sad:. Good luck to the both of us :unsure:

I thought about going back and doing paramedic school, but I guess in Arizona you have to work as an EMT before you can get into school. So I'm going to start on my med school/PA school pre reqs instead.
 
yeah i hear yah man, i guess it was a pretty good idea to join the military after all eh?
It was the best of all possible options, for sure. It's sad that so many people go blindly into these courses in AZ and CA without doing a fundamental job market survey beforehand. And it is almost criminal that the schools just take their money without discussing the job market with them in very realistic terms. This is why EMS get's paid crap. Schools across the country are cranking out many more times the personnel than the job market needs, especially in CA. Simple supply and demand.

If you can get a hospital job, that is definitely the way to go. Get some cash flow going, as well as some experience to broaden your mind and educational base. The experience you get in the hospital is significantly greater than anything you would get in a non-911 ambulance job. Especially in a teaching hospital, where education is in the air.

You'll also want to immediately resume your professional education and begin taking the foundational prerequisites for the paramedic program over the next year. That way you are positioned to enter paramedic school as soon as possible, which will greatly increase your job opportunities.

Good luck!
 
i know you live in phoenix but i talked to pima community college down in tucson and they said you just have to hold a EMT-B cert, no experience...
 
I just did a quick search and the only job that I found was a job opening at Lake Havisu AZ... you might check out the AMR website which is www.amr.net click career and then click career opportunities.
 
What about calling private services?

Someone has to be hiring, there can't just be that every job for an EMT is filled. Everyone, across the board, is always talking shortages.

Maybe that filing positions isn't a matter of finding people, but a lack of funding to pay for more people.

I know that medicare is a good $20,000 behind in payable bills to us. That's a lot of money, and it's just simply not getting paid. You can't get blood from a stone.
 
What about calling private services?

Someone has to be hiring, there can't just be that every job for an EMT is filled. Everyone, across the board, is always talking shortages.

Maybe that filing positions isn't a matter of finding people, but a lack of funding to pay for more people.

I know that medicare is a good $20,000 behind in payable bills to us. That's a lot of money, and it's just simply not getting paid. You can't get blood from a stone.

That situation is worse in CA the not only is medicare not paying but CA just signed a budget that was 100+ days late... my hometown actually had to loan the local hospital 5 million just so that they could keep the doors open and continue to serve the community.
 
If medicare would pay the bills, we could go back to paying a day crew. That's just a quarterly level.
 
I would suggest keep trying with PMT. They like everyone else are having budget problems and when a little company called med care shut down, almost all of the employees got hired by PMT for part time work. Med Care was a private company that contracted to southwest ambo for IFT's. They wore SW uniforms and drove ambo's that said SW Ambo on them. They were almost all full time firefighters working part time. I am a firefighter who works part time for PMT on what they call Fire GT, its general transport ambo's staffed with off duty firefighters.

By any chance are you fire 1&2 certified? I know of a couple small fire departments who always hire part time guys.
 
I would suggest keep trying with PMT. They like everyone else are having budget problems and when a little company called med care shut down, almost all of the employees got hired by PMT for part time work. Med Care was a private company that contracted to southwest ambo for IFT's. They wore SW uniforms and drove ambo's that said SW Ambo on them. They were almost all full time firefighters working part time. I am a firefighter who works part time for PMT on what they call Fire GT, its general transport ambo's staffed with off duty firefighters.

By any chance are you fire 1&2 certified? I know of a couple small fire departments who always hire part time guys.

Thanks for the info. I'm not fire certified yet, but will probably be going back to school pretty soon.

I figured out that Southwest doesn't have most of their jobs posted on their own site. Instead, they have everything listed on Rural Metro's site. They are actually posting 18 EMT openings and I'm going down tomorrow to apply. They also have all of their support jobs on that site. Took forever to finally find!

I was told a while back that Southwest and PMT do mostly IFTs, but I've seen a lot of Southwest trucks responding with the local departments. It doesn't seem like any of the departments have their own ambulances.

I'm used to how we do it in Tampa, where different companies have different duties. One company does BLS transports for the city FD. The other will run transports for the most part, but will have a few ambulances on standby to run with the county FD. Though both of the fire departments have their own ambulances, they reserve them for true ALS calls.
 
Though both of the fire departments have their own ambulances, they reserve them for true ALS calls.
Translation: They only transport people they think are worthy of their awesomeness. ;)
 
Southwest and PMT are mostly IFT, but there are a few smaller cities that use them for 911 responses. Both companies want you to be an employee at least 6 months before you get to ride on the 911 rigs. Off the top of my head Surprise, Peoria, El Mirage and overflow in Scottsdale use SW and PMT for 911.

I am looking to get back into some part time stuff and will be calling SW in the next few weeks. If you don't mind the drive Lifeline out of prescott is always hiring and they do 911 primarily. They are a smaller company but some good people there who will teach you a ton.
 
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