Onetime aid provided to certain licensed ambulance services, reports required, and money appropriated.
Impact
The bill proposes allocating $120 million from the state's general fund for fiscal year 2025 specifically for these aid payments, which will be administered by the Emergency Medical Services Regulatory Board. This financial support aims to bolster the operational capacity of ambulance services, helping them maintain safety and response readiness in their primary service areas. Recipients of this aid are required to utilize the funds solely for expenses related to licensed ambulance services within their designated service areas and must report on how these funds were used within specified timeframes.
Summary
HF5399 is a legislative proposal from the Minnesota House intended to provide one-time financial aid to certain licensed ambulance services facing operational challenges. The bill outlines specific criteria under which ambulance services can qualify for these aid payments, focusing particularly on the service's response density. To be eligible, an ambulance service must demonstrate a response density of 30 responses per square mile or fewer, ensuring that the aid targets those services in less densely populated areas where operational sustainability is more challenging.
Contention
Some points of contention emerging from discussions surrounding HF5399 could relate to the distribution of funds and the criteria for eligibility. Critics may argue about whether the response density requirement effectively captures the needs of all ambulance services or unfairly advantages certain regions over others. Additionally, there might be debates focused on the sufficiency of the appropriated amount in truly addressing the existing challenges faced by ambulance services in Minnesota. Reporting requirements may also face scrutiny for how they reflect the actual use and impact of the aid provided.
Local government and private ambulance service aid provisions modified, and onetime aid program established for licensed ambulance services, reports required, and money appropriated.
Office of Emergency Medical Services established to replace Emergency Medical Services Regulatory Board, duties specified and transferred, advisory council established, alternative EMS response model pilot program established, conforming changes made, provisions modified relating to ambulance service personnel and emergency medical responders, emergency ambulance service aid provided, report required, and money appropriated.