County Council approves two new ambulances for Volusia EMS fleet

At a cost of over $600,000, the two new ambulances will be staffed in March and put into service around May 1.


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  • | 11:30 a.m. January 26, 2021
By Robert Wilson on Adobe Stock
By Robert Wilson on Adobe Stock
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by: Gary Davidson

Community Information, Volusia County Government

Two years ago, the county’s public protection staff laid out a plan to eventually add more staffing and 911 ambulance units to the response fleet as the need, call volume and service demands dictated. On Tuesday, Jan. 19, the staff told the Volusia County Council that the time has come. And the council agreed, voting unanimously to buy and equip two new ambulances.

Staffing for the ambulances will be added in March. And even more ambulances probably will be needed in the future to continue keeping pace with the call volume, Public Protection Director Joe Pozzo told the council.

“We need to add additional ambulances. This is the first step to, I would say, more in the future,” Pozzo said Jan. 19. “Because the county is growing.”

At a total cost of $626,884, the two ambulances will be fully equipped for advanced life support service with medical gear such as cardiac monitors and mechanical CPR devices. According to Volusia County EMS Director Jason Brady, the addition to the fleet is necessitated by the increase over the past year in workload and the distance that current ambulance units have to travel to calls. County Councilwoman Heather Post said she agreed that the need is there.

“We definitely needed additional ambulances, and we’ve done a lot in the last several years to address the ambulance service,” Post said.

According to Pozzo, one of the new ambulances will be positioned on the east side of the county and one on the west side of the county as current demand, time of day and the need for transports dictate. The new ambulance units are expected to go into service around May 1.

 

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