Only 58 of the District's 111 ambulances are currently in service, D.C. Fire Chief Kenneth Ellerbe testified before a city council committee Thursday.
Ellerbe added that the District only has 245 paramedics, well short of its target of 300. Even that number is less impressive than it appears since Ellerbe disclosed that not all paramedics do field work or receive calls.
The failure to provide an ambulance to a police officer injured in a hit-and-run and two other incidents -- including the death of a man who died while waiting for an ambulance -- have raised questions about whether the department has enough resources to handle the emergency call volume in the fast-growing city.
Those three incidents, all within 90 days of each other, prompted the hearing, said D.C. Councilmember Tommy Wells.
Ellerbe apologized during Thursday's testimony. "I'd like to offer my sincere apology to the families," he said. "I'm deeply troubled ... I accept responsibility."
The chief also apologized for misinformation on the department's inventory of vehicles, saying that the department had faulty inventory records for a year.
An internal investigation had blamed individual employees for the slow ambulance response -- but the District's inspector general has also found a lack of adequate reserve vehicles, both ambulances and fire trucks. At any given time, only 39 ambulances are active in the District.
Ellerbe told the Council committee Thursday that although "the audit is still ongoing," he promised to overhaul the way their fleet is managed by bringing in a "fleet consultant."
Due to current shortages, Advance Life Support ambulances are routinely downgraded due to a lack of paramedics on duty, Ellerbe said, adding "The problem is not fixed." A final assessment of the inventory of D.C. Fire/EMS is still 30 days from completion.
Ellerbe's testimony comes three days after the city firefighters' union overwhelmingly approved a resolution expressing no confidence in his leadership. When asked following his testimony whether he could guarantee no more ambulance delays in the District, Ellerbe told News4 he could not.
D.C. Deputy Mayor Paul Quander testified Thursday that Ellerbe has "worked tirelessly." However, Council member Tommy Wells did not seem convinced by the testimoney, telling reporters following the hearing that he was "not satisfied" with Ellerbe's responses, "deeply concerned with the dwindling number of paramedics," and convinced there is a "systemic" problem with D.C. Fire and EMS management.
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