Excerpts from the Dailyherald.com:
Arlington Heights will increase its ambulance transport fee by 275 percent, though officials say only uninsured nonresidents who use an ambulance while in town would actually have to pay the higher fees.
As of Nov. 1, the village will charge $1,500 per transport and add a charge of $12 per mile — though deductibles, co-payments, mileage or other associated costs for village residents would be waived under a plan approved by the village board this week.
That means a nonresident who isn’t covered by insurance, Medicare or Medicaid would have to pay the fee, though Deputy Fire Chief Bernie Lyons said the village would take a compassionate approach to the collection of fees.
Officials say patients who claim a hardship would be directed to the village’s emergency assistance program. Those who provide a hardship letter from their hospital could get a write-off, as is currently the case with homeless patients.
Arlington Heights now charges $400 to $450 to residents and $600 to $650 to nonresidents for ambulance transports — rates that have remained unchanged for 11 years.
Officials say they’re looking to fill a $900,000 budget gap caused by state cuts to the village’s share of income and sales tax revenues. They say the cost of providing emergency medical services also has risen, as has demand from residents. The fee hike would add $960,000 to the $1.7 million the village already collects in transport fees.
Trustee Tom Glasgow was the lone village board member to vote against the fee increase this week.
“We subsidize the parking garage, health clinic, police and chamber of commerce. If we can subsidize those things, we can subsidize this as well,” Glasgow said. “To raise it for people who truly can’t afford it, I have an ethical problem with that.”
Andres Medical Billing, the village’s billing contractor, reports its clients charge $350 to $2,600 per transport. Naperville recently raised its fee to $1,800, and Elgin is considering doing the same.
Private ambulance services on average cost $2,000 per transport.
#1 by Operator 57 on November 1, 2017 - 2:24 AM
This begs the question of how many intoxicated or psychologically impaired homeless or indigent individuals are taken essentially free of charge to either Northwest Community or Amita Alexian Brothers. As this individuals rarely have jobs or insurance they unfairly tax the EMS system and take up valuable bed space at local healthcare facilities all at taxpayer expense.
#2 by MABAS 21 on October 21, 2017 - 6:03 PM
$1500 is an average ALS fee in the state.
#3 by Mike on October 21, 2017 - 5:15 PM
Chuck did you stop to think that maybe the insurance reimbursement rates went up and that is why they’re increasing fees. Most places charge whatever but only collect what insurance or Medicare/ Medicaid pays. And yes equipment and personnel do cost a lot of money.
#4 by Wayne on October 21, 2017 - 3:05 PM
Did you not read the article? There’s nothing wrong with what they’re doing. All of the things you seem to have an issue with have valid reasons for having money spent on them.
#5 by Chuck on October 20, 2017 - 11:23 PM
Have to pay for the new ambulances and power stretchers and firefighter paramedic salaries somehow. Let this be a reminder – don’t crash or get sick in Arlington Heights. This is a blatant rip off, and there is nothing, NOTHING that justifies a hike of this size.
#6 by Nick N on October 19, 2017 - 8:24 PM
Some time ago, a large chart was posted to this site showing BLS and ALS rates for nearly every city in northern Illinois. Is there a recent version of this chart somewhere on the web?