summary
Introduced
01/24/2025
01/24/2025
In Committee
05/29/2025
05/29/2025
Crossed Over
05/22/2025
05/22/2025
Passed
08/15/2025
08/15/2025
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
08/15/2025
08/15/2025
Introduced Session
104th General Assembly
Bill Summary
Amends the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act. In provisions concerning education and training requirements, provides that a failure rate per course of 30% or greater at the first attempt on the licensure examination shall require the EMS System to submit a quality improvement plan to the Department of Public Health. Requires the EMS System to share failure rates with the EMS Lead Instructor quarterly. Provides that neither the EMS System nor the Department may take licensure action against an EMS Lead Instructor based solely on first-attempt pass rates. Requires candidates to complete the licensure examination within the timeline required by the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians. Requires an accredited Paramedic program to be conducted only by an EMS System or an academic institution whose curriculum has been approved by the EMS System. Permits an EMS System associate hospital to allow students from an EMS System-approved and Department-approved Paramedic course to complete clinical rotations as approved by the EMS System Medical Director. Provides that the approval by the EMS System Medical Director cannot be unreasonably denied. Provides that candidates shall take the appropriate National Registry examination (rather than may elect to take the appropriate National Registry examination in lieu of the Department's examination, but are responsible for making their own arrangements for taking the National Registry examination). Provides that a person who is not an EMS personnel may operate an EMS vehicle pursuant to the Act if the specified requirements are met. Provides that a student enrolled in an EMT class may take the Department-approved EMR licensure exam after the student has completed the first 40 hours of the EMS System-approved and Department-approved EMT course. Sets forth provisions concerning Emergency Medical Services bridge programs and minimum experience and education requirements for EMS Lead Instructors. Effective immediately.
AI Summary
This bill amends the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act to introduce several key changes in education, training, and licensing for emergency medical personnel. The bill adds provisions that if an EMS course has a first-attempt licensure examination failure rate of 30% or higher, the EMS System must submit a quality improvement plan to the Department of Public Health and share failure rates with the EMS Lead Instructor quarterly. Importantly, the EMS System and Department cannot take licensure action against an EMS Lead Instructor based solely on first-attempt pass rates. The bill requires candidates to complete licensure examinations within the timeline set by the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians (NREMT) and stipulates that Paramedic programs can only be conducted by an EMS System or an academic institution with EMS System-approved curriculum. The legislation also allows EMS System associate hospitals to permit students to complete clinical rotations, with approval from the EMS System Medical Director that cannot be unreasonably denied. Additionally, the bill establishes new requirements for EMS Lead Instructors, including minimum experience and education standards, and introduces provisions for developing bridge programs to help certified nursing assistants transition to EMS careers and vice versa. The bill takes effect immediately upon becoming law.
Committee Categories
Government Affairs, Health and Social Services, Labor and Employment
Sponsors (9)
William Davis (D)*,
Kimberly Lightford (D)*,
C.D. Davidsmeyer (R),
Lisa Davis (D),
Laura Faver Dias (D),
Bill Hauter (R),
Paul Jacobs (R),
Jeff Keicher (R),
Debbie Meyers-Martin (D),
Last Action
Public Act . . . . . . . . . 104-0362 (on 08/15/2025)
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