medic001918
Forum Crew Member
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the pay rate:
not enough
I have to respectfully disagree with you to your "not enough" comment. Your typical EMT-Basic program consists of 120-150 hours of educational time from start to finish. That's a little more than three to four full time weeks worth of education. The basic curriculum the way it stands now is little more than a basic first aid course. How many other positions can make in the range of $10-15 an hour for that little amount of time invested in education?
In order to demand better wages in EMS a few things need to happen. The first is to increase our educational requirements. With knowledge (not training...there is a difference) comes more responsibility and better pay.
Now that that's out of the way, there are a few things holding back our educational process. The first is that more people work in EMS as volunteers rather than paid professionals. As volunteers, most people tend to have other careers and are limited to the amount of time to invest in the training and commitment to a service. The way to get around this is to limit training, and limit the amount of time that someone needs to commit in order to remain an EMT. If more people were working in EMS as a career, you'd find that the educational requirements could be expanded significantly. This brings us to the next issue. There are plenty of volunteer services who would oppose increasing that time commitment since they'd lose their volunteers. It's a vicious circle. There are also those who volunteer and say "if we didn't provide EMS, our town wouldn't have it." Nothing could be further from the truth. If volunteers didn't provide EMS for the town, the town would find some way to provide it. They would bring in a commercial service, or start their own. Either way, the town wouldn't do without. And for those that live in low population areas, they could create a county wide system. There are areas of the country that have this in place and it works well. It's hard to demand decent wages when the majority of people in the field are providing the same job service for free. Comparing a paid person to a volunteer performing the same job without pay, anything looks like decent wages.
Increase our educational demand, create more jobs so that there isn't such a supply of employees and our wages will increase accordingly. Until that happens, we're going to stay where we are.
Shane
NREMT-P
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