Get Full Government Meeting Transcripts, Videos, & Alerts Forever!
Oconee County weighs county‑run EMS to address response times, billing complaints
Summary
County commissioners proposed creating a county‑run emergency medical services system to gain local oversight after residents reported high ambulance bills and National EMS reports showed many priority‑1 calls exceeding 12 minutes, 59 seconds; officials estimate a $1.9 million annual net cost to taxpayers and outlined steps for hiring an EMS director and buying ambulances.
Oconee County commissioners on March 26 proposed creating a county‑run emergency medical services system to take local control of ambulance operations, citing slow priority‑1 response times and repeated billing complaints under the county’s private contractor, National EMS.
Commissioner (S1) said the county’s analysis, including a state PHIP report and two months of detailed CAD review, shows Oconee’s 2025 medical call volume at just under 4,000 and a need for three 24/7 ambulances plus a weekday peak‑hour unit. "It's my recommendation to the board of commissioners and citizens of Oconee County to create a county run EMS and to seek to become the designated 9 1 1 zone provider," the commissioner said during a presentation.
Why it matters: residents described instances of large ambulance bills and limited local oversight. The commissioner cited National EMS reports that recorded many priority‑1 calls with response times longer than 12 minutes and 59 seconds — a national dataset the county provided shows 239 such calls in 2024 and 112 so far in 2025 — and said spot checks suggest Oconee‑assigned units…
Already have an account? Log in
Subscribe to keep reading
Unlock the rest of this article — and every article on Citizen Portal.
- Unlimited articles
- AI-powered breakdowns of topics, speakers, decisions, and budgets
- Instant alerts when your location has a new meeting
- Follow topics and more locations
- 1,000 AI Insights / month, plus AI Chat

