Hardin County EMS and 9-1-1 report higher call activity and collections
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Hardin County EMS and the county 9-1-1 center presented October activity reports. EMS fiscal-year collections were reported to be nearly $2.5 million year-to-date, up from about $2 million last year; 9-1-1 reported 4,445 answered 911 calls and agency-specific dispatch percentages.
Hardin County EMS and the county 9-1-1 center presented October activity reports to the fiscal court on Nov. 25.
Mark Peterson, speaking for Hardin County EMS, summarized call-volume trends and fiscal-year-to-date revenue. Peterson reported that EMS collections for the fiscal year were "just shy of $2,500,000," an increase from about $2,000,000 at the same point last year. He also reviewed run and transfer counts and provided a breakdown of responses by unit and jurisdiction. Peterson closed by thanking staff and inviting the court to the ambulance push-in ceremony at White Mills Fire Department.
Mike Leo presented the 9-1-1 center's October activity report, listing operational metrics including the number of 911 calls answered (4,445), CAD reports and administrative call totals, and dispatch volumes by agency and fire-department run shares (Elizabethtown 35.5%, Radcliff 19.2% were cited). Leo noted the center's role in transferring calls to secondary sites and enumerated categories of calls handled in October.
Court members thanked presenters and recognized EMS personnel for responding to a recent cardiac event involving a local officer.
