Ambulatory services in Upper Darby are currently running at a restricted level, which began Sunday evening and is expected to last through Tuesday morning. Kate Denney, president of the Crozer-Chester Paramedics Association, said a nationwide staffing shortage and Crozer-specific turnover led to the reduction in service.
“So when push comes to shove, management has to make decisions on which entities will get filled,” Denney said. “Those entities happen to be the contractual ones — the ones that we are required to because they are paying services for communities to be served. So in Upper Darby’s sense, as with a lot of other municipalities and locals, EMS has been a free service for a very, very long time.”
Crozer covers a little over half of Delaware County’s advanced and basic life support services. Normal coverage is set to resume soon.
“If you were to take a look at our schedules for the rest of the week and throughout, we continue to service Upper Darby as best as we can,” Denney said. “There was just a little lapse because of our staffing.”
She recalled working in the township some nights as well as helping supplement other providers that are experiencing staffing issues elsewhere in the county.
“We just do not have the staff to keep every single unit up in service at this point,” Denney said.