Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Perhaps another point of view that might be considered is, " What's in it for the public? " What is the expected impact on the public of our being expected to continually do more with less. Is there a point of diminishing returns? How far can the EMS system be stretched before it breaks? Or is it broken even now? Donn has a great point about shortages being good, to a point. But what level of crisis will the public endure before finally realizing how much it depends on EMS? What level of stress on the system will politicians accept before deciding to do something? What level of stress will private company managers inflict upon their employees and equipment before they decide that they cannot extract any more from their employees? Nurses in California just had a march on the State Capitol to protest Ah-Nold's postponement of implementation of a rule that requires one nurse to every 4 patients in hospitals. They mustered 1000 people and got nationwide coverage. There is obviously little public awareness of the Notorious Scope of Practice Model or how it would affect care in rural areas. How can we do more to educate them? How can we show the public that EMS is in crisis, that there is a limit upon what can be done with nothing, and that unless something changes, EMS as we know it will decline in quality and services. How many of you think that the overall quality of EMS services will improve across the board over the next 5 years? What if everyone woke up tomorrow and found that there was no EMS? Would anybody notice? g > > Brown writes: > > > Right now what's wrong with it is that I'll be expected to continue > > to do more with less. > > So, for Brown the question remains " What's in it for me? " > > Regards, > Donn > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P > ~~ Vescere bracis meis ~~ > > Don't Miss EMStock 2005 > www.EMStock.com > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Perhaps another point of view that might be considered is, " What's in it for the public? " What is the expected impact on the public of our being expected to continually do more with less. Is there a point of diminishing returns? How far can the EMS system be stretched before it breaks? Or is it broken even now? Donn has a great point about shortages being good, to a point. But what level of crisis will the public endure before finally realizing how much it depends on EMS? What level of stress on the system will politicians accept before deciding to do something? What level of stress will private company managers inflict upon their employees and equipment before they decide that they cannot extract any more from their employees? Nurses in California just had a march on the State Capitol to protest Ah-Nold's postponement of implementation of a rule that requires one nurse to every 4 patients in hospitals. They mustered 1000 people and got nationwide coverage. There is obviously little public awareness of the Notorious Scope of Practice Model or how it would affect care in rural areas. How can we do more to educate them? How can we show the public that EMS is in crisis, that there is a limit upon what can be done with nothing, and that unless something changes, EMS as we know it will decline in quality and services. How many of you think that the overall quality of EMS services will improve across the board over the next 5 years? What if everyone woke up tomorrow and found that there was no EMS? Would anybody notice? g > > Brown writes: > > > Right now what's wrong with it is that I'll be expected to continue > > to do more with less. > > So, for Brown the question remains " What's in it for me? " > > Regards, > Donn > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P > ~~ Vescere bracis meis ~~ > > Don't Miss EMStock 2005 > www.EMStock.com > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Perhaps another point of view that might be considered is, " What's in it for the public? " What is the expected impact on the public of our being expected to continually do more with less. Is there a point of diminishing returns? How far can the EMS system be stretched before it breaks? Or is it broken even now? Donn has a great point about shortages being good, to a point. But what level of crisis will the public endure before finally realizing how much it depends on EMS? What level of stress on the system will politicians accept before deciding to do something? What level of stress will private company managers inflict upon their employees and equipment before they decide that they cannot extract any more from their employees? Nurses in California just had a march on the State Capitol to protest Ah-Nold's postponement of implementation of a rule that requires one nurse to every 4 patients in hospitals. They mustered 1000 people and got nationwide coverage. There is obviously little public awareness of the Notorious Scope of Practice Model or how it would affect care in rural areas. How can we do more to educate them? How can we show the public that EMS is in crisis, that there is a limit upon what can be done with nothing, and that unless something changes, EMS as we know it will decline in quality and services. How many of you think that the overall quality of EMS services will improve across the board over the next 5 years? What if everyone woke up tomorrow and found that there was no EMS? Would anybody notice? g > > Brown writes: > > > Right now what's wrong with it is that I'll be expected to continue > > to do more with less. > > So, for Brown the question remains " What's in it for me? " > > Regards, > Donn > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P > ~~ Vescere bracis meis ~~ > > Don't Miss EMStock 2005 > www.EMStock.com > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 For what it's worth, I know there are attorney positions (requiring an additional 3 years of school after a bachelor's degree) than pay around $32,000. Being a paramedic, especially in an urban system, could easily pay more. -Wes Ogilvie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 For what it's worth, I know there are attorney positions (requiring an additional 3 years of school after a bachelor's degree) than pay around $32,000. Being a paramedic, especially in an urban system, could easily pay more. -Wes Ogilvie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 For what it's worth, I know there are attorney positions (requiring an additional 3 years of school after a bachelor's degree) than pay around $32,000. Being a paramedic, especially in an urban system, could easily pay more. -Wes Ogilvie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 In a message dated 12/13/2004 10:44:45 PM Central Standard Time, magnetass@... writes: Are you willing to take on a bachelors degree program knowing that you will top out at 12 or 13 bucks an hour for the remainder of your career, because you just LOVE being an ambulance jockey? There are people who take on bachelor degree programs knowing they wont get paid anywhere near what they are worth---but do it to enter a field that they love anyway. Degrees are not designed only for those that want to make a lot of money. Often young people give up their dreams and enter a degree program based on what the salary will bring, or what family wants them to do, or friends think is the " cool " get rich quick program--and then they're miserable. That's not what education is about. That said, there are no easy answers....fighting each other will solve nothing. In spite of the pay, we still have medics doing the job because they love it. We've got medics volunteering to do it, in addition to holding down full time jobs because they love it. Sure, some will go into more " lucrative " fields.......but many will stay. (And, if any BS programs will give credit for humanities, science, math, psychology etc courses already taken and " locked " in a prior degree, some of us may even get the BS-EMS!) Kathi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 In a message dated 12/13/2004 10:44:45 PM Central Standard Time, magnetass@... writes: Are you willing to take on a bachelors degree program knowing that you will top out at 12 or 13 bucks an hour for the remainder of your career, because you just LOVE being an ambulance jockey? There are people who take on bachelor degree programs knowing they wont get paid anywhere near what they are worth---but do it to enter a field that they love anyway. Degrees are not designed only for those that want to make a lot of money. Often young people give up their dreams and enter a degree program based on what the salary will bring, or what family wants them to do, or friends think is the " cool " get rich quick program--and then they're miserable. That's not what education is about. That said, there are no easy answers....fighting each other will solve nothing. In spite of the pay, we still have medics doing the job because they love it. We've got medics volunteering to do it, in addition to holding down full time jobs because they love it. Sure, some will go into more " lucrative " fields.......but many will stay. (And, if any BS programs will give credit for humanities, science, math, psychology etc courses already taken and " locked " in a prior degree, some of us may even get the BS-EMS!) Kathi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 In a message dated 12/13/2004 10:44:45 PM Central Standard Time, magnetass@... writes: Are you willing to take on a bachelors degree program knowing that you will top out at 12 or 13 bucks an hour for the remainder of your career, because you just LOVE being an ambulance jockey? There are people who take on bachelor degree programs knowing they wont get paid anywhere near what they are worth---but do it to enter a field that they love anyway. Degrees are not designed only for those that want to make a lot of money. Often young people give up their dreams and enter a degree program based on what the salary will bring, or what family wants them to do, or friends think is the " cool " get rich quick program--and then they're miserable. That's not what education is about. That said, there are no easy answers....fighting each other will solve nothing. In spite of the pay, we still have medics doing the job because they love it. We've got medics volunteering to do it, in addition to holding down full time jobs because they love it. Sure, some will go into more " lucrative " fields.......but many will stay. (And, if any BS programs will give credit for humanities, science, math, psychology etc courses already taken and " locked " in a prior degree, some of us may even get the BS-EMS!) Kathi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Brown writes: > I'm not saying " what's in it for me " really....what I'm saying is that for > the FUTURE of pre-hospital medicine, all this talk about increasing the > educational requirements to bachelors degree level is totally moot unless a > munincipality someplace is willing to employ me and my shiny new bachelors > degree at an annual salary commesurate with my education. The already don't > do that right now, so please explain to me what their motivation would be > later after I've invested the effort to obtain my degree? There's already a > shortage of medics right now, but I don't see anybody offering increased > wages to entice people to jump ship, or move up from basics and > intermediates. I'll answer your question with another. What exactly is wrong with having a shortage of medics? The combination of internal efforts to raise nursing educational standards and a shortage of nurses led to the pay rate you mention in another post. It didn't happen overnight for them and it won't for us either. > BTW, what exactly is wrong with right now? Lots of us have mortgages and car > payments to pay right now, and have already invested in our educations and > aren't being compensated appropriately. Nothing wrong with wanting it, but expecting it or holding progressive efforts hostage is another story. The time to make changes that might have led to better conditions and wages for current street level medics passed with us bickering over the same things we still can't agree upon. Has anyone ever heard of compromise? Either we all get together and move in the same direction or we doom ourselves to repeating our previous failures. Just for general information, it appears someone is again making smoky backrooms attempts at getting grandfathering legislation looked at again. Why do we continue to beat the same dead horse? Regards, Donn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P " Education seems to be in America the only commodity of which the customer tries to get as little he can for his money. " ~~ Max Forman ~~ Don't Miss EMStock <http://www.EMStock.com> www.EMStock.com May 20 - 22 2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Brown writes: > I'm not saying " what's in it for me " really....what I'm saying is that for > the FUTURE of pre-hospital medicine, all this talk about increasing the > educational requirements to bachelors degree level is totally moot unless a > munincipality someplace is willing to employ me and my shiny new bachelors > degree at an annual salary commesurate with my education. The already don't > do that right now, so please explain to me what their motivation would be > later after I've invested the effort to obtain my degree? There's already a > shortage of medics right now, but I don't see anybody offering increased > wages to entice people to jump ship, or move up from basics and > intermediates. I'll answer your question with another. What exactly is wrong with having a shortage of medics? The combination of internal efforts to raise nursing educational standards and a shortage of nurses led to the pay rate you mention in another post. It didn't happen overnight for them and it won't for us either. > BTW, what exactly is wrong with right now? Lots of us have mortgages and car > payments to pay right now, and have already invested in our educations and > aren't being compensated appropriately. Nothing wrong with wanting it, but expecting it or holding progressive efforts hostage is another story. The time to make changes that might have led to better conditions and wages for current street level medics passed with us bickering over the same things we still can't agree upon. Has anyone ever heard of compromise? Either we all get together and move in the same direction or we doom ourselves to repeating our previous failures. Just for general information, it appears someone is again making smoky backrooms attempts at getting grandfathering legislation looked at again. Why do we continue to beat the same dead horse? Regards, Donn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P " Education seems to be in America the only commodity of which the customer tries to get as little he can for his money. " ~~ Max Forman ~~ Don't Miss EMStock <http://www.EMStock.com> www.EMStock.com May 20 - 22 2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 " I'll answer your question with another. What exactly is wrong with having a shortage of medics? The combination of internal efforts to raise nursing educational standards and a shortage of nurses led to the pay rate you mention in another post. It didn't happen overnight for them and it won't for us either. " Right now what's wrong with it is that I'll be expected to continue to do more with less. Our call volume has steadily increased every year, while an increase in numbers of units on the road has not matched the demand. This situation, combined with the continued lack of pay, forces people who would otherwise stay in the profession to abandon it as an economic necessity, which creates more shortages. Its a vicious circle, for which I do not have an answer except that at SOME point the pay in EMS is going to habe to be recognized as the single most important issue to be adressed, not education. Its unreasonable to expect the healthcare system to see us as professionals, and for EMS workers to move into their deserved place as healthcare professionals until they are paid like professionals. This is not a chicken or the egg argument. Nobody is going to sign up to be a paramedic when the course is 2 years, much less 4 years, to make 1/3 as much as a nurse. We've taken EMS as far as it can go education-wise without a drastic increase in compensation. Its as least as far as I'm willing to go. what do you imagine the odds are of me having to obtain ANOTHER degree to do a job I was doing before for the same money? I've read the on-going controversy about this issue for weeks now, and I just can't get past the fact that while I agree that the field of EMS would benefit greatly by moving it into a bachelors degree program, the issue of what the salary involved would be needs to be figured out first, otherwise its all just a big waste of time. I have no doubt that any city manager would love to employ a bunch of college degreed employees for 12 bucks an hour, don't you? magnetass sends RE: What's in it for me? [WAS Re: National Standards (Long)] > > Brown writes: > > > >> I'm not saying " what's in it for me " really....what I'm saying is that >> for > > >> the FUTURE of pre-hospital medicine, all this talk about increasing the >> educational requirements to bachelors degree level is totally moot unless > a >> munincipality someplace is willing to employ me and my shiny new >> bachelors > >> degree at an annual salary commesurate with my education. The already > don't >> do that right now, so please explain to me what their motivation would be >> later after I've invested the effort to obtain my degree? There's already > a >> shortage of medics right now, but I don't see anybody offering increased >> wages to entice people to jump ship, or move up from basics and >> intermediates. > > > > I'll answer your question with another. What exactly is wrong with having > a > shortage of medics? The combination of internal efforts to raise nursing > educational standards and a shortage of nurses led to the pay rate you > mention in another post. It didn't happen overnight for them and it won't > for us either. > >> BTW, what exactly is wrong with right now? Lots of us have mortgages and > car >> payments to pay right now, and have already invested in our educations >> and > >> aren't being compensated appropriately. > > > > Nothing wrong with wanting it, but expecting it or holding progressive > efforts hostage is another story. The time to make changes that might > have > led to better conditions and wages for current street level medics passed > with us bickering over the same things we still can't agree upon. Has > anyone ever heard of compromise? Either we all get together and move in > the > same direction or we doom ourselves to repeating our previous failures. > > > > Just for general information, it appears someone is again making smoky > backrooms attempts at getting grandfathering legislation looked at again. > Why do we continue to beat the same dead horse? > > > Regards, > Donn > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P > > " Education seems to be in America the only commodity of which the > customer tries to get as little he can for his money. " > ~~ Max Forman ~~ > > Don't Miss EMStock > <http://www.EMStock.com> www.EMStock.com > > May 20 - 22 2005 > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 " I'll answer your question with another. What exactly is wrong with having a shortage of medics? The combination of internal efforts to raise nursing educational standards and a shortage of nurses led to the pay rate you mention in another post. It didn't happen overnight for them and it won't for us either. " Right now what's wrong with it is that I'll be expected to continue to do more with less. Our call volume has steadily increased every year, while an increase in numbers of units on the road has not matched the demand. This situation, combined with the continued lack of pay, forces people who would otherwise stay in the profession to abandon it as an economic necessity, which creates more shortages. Its a vicious circle, for which I do not have an answer except that at SOME point the pay in EMS is going to habe to be recognized as the single most important issue to be adressed, not education. Its unreasonable to expect the healthcare system to see us as professionals, and for EMS workers to move into their deserved place as healthcare professionals until they are paid like professionals. This is not a chicken or the egg argument. Nobody is going to sign up to be a paramedic when the course is 2 years, much less 4 years, to make 1/3 as much as a nurse. We've taken EMS as far as it can go education-wise without a drastic increase in compensation. Its as least as far as I'm willing to go. what do you imagine the odds are of me having to obtain ANOTHER degree to do a job I was doing before for the same money? I've read the on-going controversy about this issue for weeks now, and I just can't get past the fact that while I agree that the field of EMS would benefit greatly by moving it into a bachelors degree program, the issue of what the salary involved would be needs to be figured out first, otherwise its all just a big waste of time. I have no doubt that any city manager would love to employ a bunch of college degreed employees for 12 bucks an hour, don't you? magnetass sends RE: What's in it for me? [WAS Re: National Standards (Long)] > > Brown writes: > > > >> I'm not saying " what's in it for me " really....what I'm saying is that >> for > > >> the FUTURE of pre-hospital medicine, all this talk about increasing the >> educational requirements to bachelors degree level is totally moot unless > a >> munincipality someplace is willing to employ me and my shiny new >> bachelors > >> degree at an annual salary commesurate with my education. The already > don't >> do that right now, so please explain to me what their motivation would be >> later after I've invested the effort to obtain my degree? There's already > a >> shortage of medics right now, but I don't see anybody offering increased >> wages to entice people to jump ship, or move up from basics and >> intermediates. > > > > I'll answer your question with another. What exactly is wrong with having > a > shortage of medics? The combination of internal efforts to raise nursing > educational standards and a shortage of nurses led to the pay rate you > mention in another post. It didn't happen overnight for them and it won't > for us either. > >> BTW, what exactly is wrong with right now? Lots of us have mortgages and > car >> payments to pay right now, and have already invested in our educations >> and > >> aren't being compensated appropriately. > > > > Nothing wrong with wanting it, but expecting it or holding progressive > efforts hostage is another story. The time to make changes that might > have > led to better conditions and wages for current street level medics passed > with us bickering over the same things we still can't agree upon. Has > anyone ever heard of compromise? Either we all get together and move in > the > same direction or we doom ourselves to repeating our previous failures. > > > > Just for general information, it appears someone is again making smoky > backrooms attempts at getting grandfathering legislation looked at again. > Why do we continue to beat the same dead horse? > > > Regards, > Donn > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P > > " Education seems to be in America the only commodity of which the > customer tries to get as little he can for his money. " > ~~ Max Forman ~~ > > Don't Miss EMStock > <http://www.EMStock.com> www.EMStock.com > > May 20 - 22 2005 > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Brown writes: > Right now what's wrong with it is that I'll be expected to continue > to do more with less. So, for Brown the question remains " What's in it for me? " Regards, Donn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P ~~ Vescere bracis meis ~~ Don't Miss EMStock 2005 www.EMStock.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Brown writes: > Right now what's wrong with it is that I'll be expected to continue > to do more with less. So, for Brown the question remains " What's in it for me? " Regards, Donn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P ~~ Vescere bracis meis ~~ Don't Miss EMStock 2005 www.EMStock.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Brown writes: > Right now what's wrong with it is that I'll be expected to continue > to do more with less. So, for Brown the question remains " What's in it for me? " Regards, Donn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P ~~ Vescere bracis meis ~~ Don't Miss EMStock 2005 www.EMStock.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 I am saying in this world today the average person is not going to bother becoming a medic at all. Go be all you can bee join the university train and become a Dr. and earn 200k a year or even become a paramedic Dr. and earn as much as 20 k a year just look at all the possibilities. Go 4 year degree program and you will be able to earn as much as a high school graduate prison guard who know earns more then a paramedic for most company's. I know there are quite a few of us paramedics working at prisons now as guards making more money. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- RE: What's in it for me? [WAS Re: National Standards (Long)] Brown writes: > I'm not saying " what's in it for me " really....what I'm saying is that for > the FUTURE of pre-hospital medicine, all this talk about increasing the > educational requirements to bachelors degree level is totally moot unless a > munincipality someplace is willing to employ me and my shiny new bachelors > degree at an annual salary commesurate with my education. The already don't > do that right now, so please explain to me what their motivation would be > later after I've invested the effort to obtain my degree? There's already a > shortage of medics right now, but I don't see anybody offering increased > wages to entice people to jump ship, or move up from basics and > intermediates. I'll answer your question with another. What exactly is wrong with having a shortage of medics? The combination of internal efforts to raise nursing educational standards and a shortage of nurses led to the pay rate you mention in another post. It didn't happen overnight for them and it won't for us either. > BTW, what exactly is wrong with right now? Lots of us have mortgages and car > payments to pay right now, and have already invested in our educations and > aren't being compensated appropriately. Nothing wrong with wanting it, but expecting it or holding progressive efforts hostage is another story. The time to make changes that might have led to better conditions and wages for current street level medics passed with us bickering over the same things we still can't agree upon. Has anyone ever heard of compromise? Either we all get together and move in the same direction or we doom ourselves to repeating our previous failures. Just for general information, it appears someone is again making smoky backrooms attempts at getting grandfathering legislation looked at again. Why do we continue to beat the same dead horse? Regards, Donn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P " Education seems to be in America the only commodity of which the customer tries to get as little he can for his money. " ~~ Max Forman ~~ Don't Miss EMStock <http://www.EMStock.com> www.EMStock.com May 20 - 22 2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 I am saying in this world today the average person is not going to bother becoming a medic at all. Go be all you can bee join the university train and become a Dr. and earn 200k a year or even become a paramedic Dr. and earn as much as 20 k a year just look at all the possibilities. Go 4 year degree program and you will be able to earn as much as a high school graduate prison guard who know earns more then a paramedic for most company's. I know there are quite a few of us paramedics working at prisons now as guards making more money. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- RE: What's in it for me? [WAS Re: National Standards (Long)] Brown writes: > I'm not saying " what's in it for me " really....what I'm saying is that for > the FUTURE of pre-hospital medicine, all this talk about increasing the > educational requirements to bachelors degree level is totally moot unless a > munincipality someplace is willing to employ me and my shiny new bachelors > degree at an annual salary commesurate with my education. The already don't > do that right now, so please explain to me what their motivation would be > later after I've invested the effort to obtain my degree? There's already a > shortage of medics right now, but I don't see anybody offering increased > wages to entice people to jump ship, or move up from basics and > intermediates. I'll answer your question with another. What exactly is wrong with having a shortage of medics? The combination of internal efforts to raise nursing educational standards and a shortage of nurses led to the pay rate you mention in another post. It didn't happen overnight for them and it won't for us either. > BTW, what exactly is wrong with right now? Lots of us have mortgages and car > payments to pay right now, and have already invested in our educations and > aren't being compensated appropriately. Nothing wrong with wanting it, but expecting it or holding progressive efforts hostage is another story. The time to make changes that might have led to better conditions and wages for current street level medics passed with us bickering over the same things we still can't agree upon. Has anyone ever heard of compromise? Either we all get together and move in the same direction or we doom ourselves to repeating our previous failures. Just for general information, it appears someone is again making smoky backrooms attempts at getting grandfathering legislation looked at again. Why do we continue to beat the same dead horse? Regards, Donn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P " Education seems to be in America the only commodity of which the customer tries to get as little he can for his money. " ~~ Max Forman ~~ Don't Miss EMStock <http://www.EMStock.com> www.EMStock.com May 20 - 22 2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 I am saying in this world today the average person is not going to bother becoming a medic at all. Go be all you can bee join the university train and become a Dr. and earn 200k a year or even become a paramedic Dr. and earn as much as 20 k a year just look at all the possibilities. Go 4 year degree program and you will be able to earn as much as a high school graduate prison guard who know earns more then a paramedic for most company's. I know there are quite a few of us paramedics working at prisons now as guards making more money. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- RE: What's in it for me? [WAS Re: National Standards (Long)] Brown writes: > I'm not saying " what's in it for me " really....what I'm saying is that for > the FUTURE of pre-hospital medicine, all this talk about increasing the > educational requirements to bachelors degree level is totally moot unless a > munincipality someplace is willing to employ me and my shiny new bachelors > degree at an annual salary commesurate with my education. The already don't > do that right now, so please explain to me what their motivation would be > later after I've invested the effort to obtain my degree? There's already a > shortage of medics right now, but I don't see anybody offering increased > wages to entice people to jump ship, or move up from basics and > intermediates. I'll answer your question with another. What exactly is wrong with having a shortage of medics? The combination of internal efforts to raise nursing educational standards and a shortage of nurses led to the pay rate you mention in another post. It didn't happen overnight for them and it won't for us either. > BTW, what exactly is wrong with right now? Lots of us have mortgages and car > payments to pay right now, and have already invested in our educations and > aren't being compensated appropriately. Nothing wrong with wanting it, but expecting it or holding progressive efforts hostage is another story. The time to make changes that might have led to better conditions and wages for current street level medics passed with us bickering over the same things we still can't agree upon. Has anyone ever heard of compromise? Either we all get together and move in the same direction or we doom ourselves to repeating our previous failures. Just for general information, it appears someone is again making smoky backrooms attempts at getting grandfathering legislation looked at again. Why do we continue to beat the same dead horse? Regards, Donn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ D.E. (Donn) , LP, NREMT-P " Education seems to be in America the only commodity of which the customer tries to get as little he can for his money. " ~~ Max Forman ~~ Don't Miss EMStock <http://www.EMStock.com> www.EMStock.com May 20 - 22 2005 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 , After numerous debates...I can't believe we are almost on the same side of this arguement....I have to agree with you...get all the education you want...but it won't affect your personal pay until you find someone (municipality, hospital, dr. office, private company, etc) that will pay you for your education...and you are not going to find that until you find someone who is going to pay that " someone " (municipality, hospital, dr. office, private company, etc) for the services that they employ you to deliver. I love the EMS Agenda for the Future...just don't ignore the comments that are throughout the entire document...the limiting factor to the DREAM is finding a way to PAY for it. Dudley Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 , After numerous debates...I can't believe we are almost on the same side of this arguement....I have to agree with you...get all the education you want...but it won't affect your personal pay until you find someone (municipality, hospital, dr. office, private company, etc) that will pay you for your education...and you are not going to find that until you find someone who is going to pay that " someone " (municipality, hospital, dr. office, private company, etc) for the services that they employ you to deliver. I love the EMS Agenda for the Future...just don't ignore the comments that are throughout the entire document...the limiting factor to the DREAM is finding a way to PAY for it. Dudley Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 , After numerous debates...I can't believe we are almost on the same side of this arguement....I have to agree with you...get all the education you want...but it won't affect your personal pay until you find someone (municipality, hospital, dr. office, private company, etc) that will pay you for your education...and you are not going to find that until you find someone who is going to pay that " someone " (municipality, hospital, dr. office, private company, etc) for the services that they employ you to deliver. I love the EMS Agenda for the Future...just don't ignore the comments that are throughout the entire document...the limiting factor to the DREAM is finding a way to PAY for it. Dudley Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Hey...all you internet research hounds...what is the average salary for a new graduate with a backelor degree in anything...across the board? Just curious...but I know a lot of 4 year degreed people making less than ALOT of paramedics. BTW, I know of at least 2 places that pay starting paramedics in the 40's...in Texas and many others that pay in the mid 30's...this compared to my first job as a paramedic in 1988 making $18,000...so if in 16 years that salary has doubled...simple Aggie math tells me that by 2020 medics will be making 70 to 80K starting....seems a little far fetched for the job we do...but if someone will pay it...we better be able to educate it. Dudley Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Hey...all you internet research hounds...what is the average salary for a new graduate with a backelor degree in anything...across the board? Just curious...but I know a lot of 4 year degreed people making less than ALOT of paramedics. BTW, I know of at least 2 places that pay starting paramedics in the 40's...in Texas and many others that pay in the mid 30's...this compared to my first job as a paramedic in 1988 making $18,000...so if in 16 years that salary has doubled...simple Aggie math tells me that by 2020 medics will be making 70 to 80K starting....seems a little far fetched for the job we do...but if someone will pay it...we better be able to educate it. Dudley Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 13, 2004 Report Share Posted December 13, 2004 Hey...all you internet research hounds...what is the average salary for a new graduate with a backelor degree in anything...across the board? Just curious...but I know a lot of 4 year degreed people making less than ALOT of paramedics. BTW, I know of at least 2 places that pay starting paramedics in the 40's...in Texas and many others that pay in the mid 30's...this compared to my first job as a paramedic in 1988 making $18,000...so if in 16 years that salary has doubled...simple Aggie math tells me that by 2020 medics will be making 70 to 80K starting....seems a little far fetched for the job we do...but if someone will pay it...we better be able to educate it. Dudley Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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