Pennsylvania
As response times increase, EMS operations in Pennsylvania are in crisis
PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — EMS operations across the state are in crisis.
Understaffed and underfunded, their resources are stretched so thin that response times are increasing and an ambulance may not arrive in a timely manner. When minutes count will they be there?
“Everyone deserves an ambulance,” Trista Beary of Tionesta Ambulance said. “If that was my loved one who was hurt and needed an ambulance, I would want someone to respond.”
In rural Forest County, there’s only one part-time ambulance service, and Beary is one of only two EMTs who cover the many narrow and winding country roads. Because resources are so thin, tragedy has ensued.
Response times in rural counties can be as slow as an hour. Not timely enough to save those in cardiac arrest or those in serious accidents like 14-year-old Cameron Deihl, an Eagle Scout who bled from internal injuries waiting for an ambulance.
“We got him on the backboard. We got him in the ambulance and he passed right away,” Forest County Commissioner Robert Snyder said.
Pennsylvania’s EMS agencies are grossly underfunded and understaffed. The agencies struggle to adequately pay their EMTs and paramedics while maintaining their equipment. A patchwork quilt of more than 1,200 agencies, they’re responding to 2.5 million calls a year, losing money on each one.
“Every time one of these ambulances pull out to go on a trip, we lose money,” said Ken Bacha of Mutual Aid EMS.
Operations like Mutual Aid in Westmoreland County depend almost entirely on insurance reimbursements for transports to area hospitals, which cover only 60 percent of their ever-rising costs for equipment and staff. While operating millions of dollars in the red, 32 of the 33 towns Mutual Aid services give it no money at all.
Bacha: “We get no help from these municipalities. They name us as their provider. That’s great. But we get no funding to support that.”
KDKA-TV’s Andy Sheehan: “They’re on a free ride?”
Bacha: “Basically they are.”
Buckling under the weight of those expenses, Jeannette EMS recently closed its bay door for good, and Mutual Aid has had to pick up that service area and its additional 1,800 calls a year. All of this is impacting public safety, as increased demand and shrinking resources equal longer response times.
Bacha: “They’ve gone up two minutes in the last couple of years.”
Sheehan: “And two minutes is critical.”
Bacha: “Absolutely.”
That mirrors the strain across the state where, according to state data, the average response time has also increased in recent years from 15 minutes in 2018 to 17 minutes in 2021. Up in Forest County, the situation is beyond critical.
“Some people have taken to loading their loved one in a vehicle and drive as quick as they can to a hospital because they don’t know if and when an ambulance is coming,” said Snyder.
In Forest County, Snyder says some residents with heart conditions have moved. But at $15 an hour, officials are not finding many young EMTs like Beary, who is sustained by small victories, like recently saving a woman from the serious consequences of a stroke.
“We got her there in time and there were no deficits. So those are the moments that are rewarding. And you’ve got to take those ones and let them outweigh the bad ones,” Beary said.
EMS chiefs across Pennsylvania are sounding the alarm, calling for funding and resources to stem the crisis and shore up medical emergency response in the state.
Pennsylvania
New Hope, Pennsylvania and Lambertville, New Jersey host first-ever restaurant week
Calling all foodies! Restaurant Week in Lambertville, New Jersey, and New Hope, Pennsylvania, kicks off on Monday, Jan. 13.
In reality, diners can take advantage of special meals and discounts for two weeks at restaurants in both riverfront communities.
Unfortunately, the New Hope-Lambertville Toll-Supported Bridge is also shut down to all motor and pedestrian traffic for the next two weeks for repairs. But business owners hope the closure doesn’t deter people from coming out to eat.
“Lambertville and New Hope are known as sister cities separated by the Delaware River and the river closing has impacted business greatly,” said Vice President of New Hope Chamber of Commerce Mary Brashier. “Typically, we see some impact to the businesses.”
Still, restaurant owners and staff say they’re working hard to create a charming experience for diners.
“A lot of us live in Lambertville and got used to being able to walk over the bridge to come into New Hope,” said Caelin Murphy, the event coordinator at Nektar Wine Bar in New Hope. “Enjoying that beautiful walk, seeing the views of the Delaware.” Murphy said. Nektar is highlighting their favorite tapas dishes during restaurant week.
Across the river in Lambertville, the team at Under the Moon is looking forward to this unique restaurant week.
“Under the Moon is a Spanish-Italian restaurant with wonderful craft cocktails at our bar,” owner Eric Richardson said. “We’ve been in town eight years and Lambertville is a wonderful community, and we appreciate the support of everyone.”
Restaurants in Pennsylvania participating in restaurant week
- OldeStone Steakhouse
- River House at Odette’s
- GreenHouse New Hope
- Havana
- Karla’s
- Nektar Wine Bar
- Ferry + Main Restaurant at the Logan Inn
- Anzu Social
- Italian Cucina
- Martine’s Riverhouse
- The Salt House
- V Spot
- Triumph Brewing Company
Restaurants in New Jersey participating in restaurant week
- Lambertville Station Restaurant and Inn
- Chive Cafe
- Pru Thai
- Under The Moon
- Black Bass Hotel
- Woolverton Inn
- El Tule
- De Floret
- The Starving Artists Cafe
- Local Greek
- Revolution Woodfire Dining
Pennsylvania
Partly to mostly cloudy overnight, partly sunny & seasonable tomorrow in south-central Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
Native trout prized by anglers is getting nearly $4M in habitat help in N.J., Pa. and N.Y.
Millions of dollars are coming to New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New York waterways to improve habitat for the native Eastern brook trout.
The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection announced Wednesday it will lead the multi-state partnership to help restore the fish to waterways in parts of all three states.
The grant for $3.5 million was announced by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation as part of nearly $122.5 million awarded through the America’s Ecosystem Restoration Initiative: America the Beautiful Challenge. This is a competitive grant program funded by President Joe Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, other federal conservation programs and private sources.
Recipients agreed to at least $8.7 million in matching contributions for a total conservation impact of $131.1 million spread among 61 grants supporting landscape-scale conservation projects across 42 states, 19 Tribal Nations, and 3 U.S. territories. The match for the Eastern brook trout grant is $389,200, for a total project amount of $3,889,200.
Eastern brook trout, known as brookies, are the official state fish species for New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New York — and considered an indicator of good water quality, the N.J. DEP said in a news release. Prized by anglers, it’s the Garden State’s only native trout species.
Like the lake trout, it’s part of the genus Salvelinus, different from other trout species familiar to local anglers. Rainbow trout are in the genus Oncorhynchus, while brown trout are in the genus Salmo, though all three genera are part of the subfamily Salmoninae in the family Salmonidae.
The grant will fund cold-water conservation projects in priority watersheds over the next four years, including removing barriers such as dams and culverts, enhancing in-stream habitat, restoring floodplain habitat and mitigating upstream stressors that can lead to higher water temperature, according to the release. It is focused on safeguarding the biodiversity of the Appalachian Corridor highlands and streams within the three states, according to the N.J. DEP’s release.
“New Jersey is proud to be part of this effort,” stated New Jersey Environmental Protection Commissioner Shawn M. LaTourette. “This species holds a special place for anglers and anyone who cares about the health of our cold-water streams and lakes.
“We thank the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation for this opportunity and look forward to working with our partner states in developing projects that will enhance habitat not only for Eastern brook trout, but for other cold-water fish species as well.”
Amy Wolfe, director of Trout Unlimited’s northeast coldwater habitat program, told the public radio station WHYY the tri-state initiative is the first of its kind in the region: “Our goal in this will be to focus on projects that can reconnect fragmented habitat and reduce pollution from sediment runoff and from other land use impacts in these areas.”
Biden launched the America the Beautiful Challenge grant program in 2021, setting the nation’s first-ever goal to conserve at least 30% of U.S. lands and waters by 2030, according to the N.J. DEP release.
The program being administered by N.J. DEP Fish & Wildlife is a collaboration with the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission, Trout Unlimited, the Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture, the Northeast Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, the Wildlife Management Institute and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
“This initiative is fundamentally about aligning implementation resources with identified projects to help conserve a priority species for all three states and our partners,” stated Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission Executive Director Tim Schaeffer. “In so doing, we are affirming a commitment to landscape-level conservation that capitalizes on unprecedented partnerships here in the Northeast.”
Steve Hurst, chief of fisheries for the New York Department of Environmental Conservation, says in the release: “The work that will be accomplished under the America the Beautiful Challenge grant marks a new phase for the already successful joint venture, as states will now use the knowledge compiled over the past 20 years to collectively improve upon the habitat brook trout depend upon in the Delaware watershed.”
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Kurt Bresswein may be reached at kbresswein@lehighvalleylive.com.
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